Monday 15 August 2016

Reply to Ass. 5 critique.

The following is in answer to Jesse Alexander's critique of my Ass 5 submission.

Hi Jesse,

Thank you for the feedback and am pleased you like the concept of the assignment.  

I have a copy of Geoff Dyer’s The Ongoing Moment which, at your suggestion, I have re-read.  This work must influence any photographer who is working on a continuing theme.  The subject of this assignment could indeed be continued, and is open ended for that reason.  The only limit on the number of images was the one imposed in the assignments remit of fifteen images.  Much the work that I have submitted for the last two modules has, by design, been open ended with left room for further investigation and study.  In this module all of the submitted assignments have room for development.  The FSA submission is only a small part of the research I carried out.  The Trolly submission was one of a number of ideas I had and was not the first submission.  The single image narrative is a subject I love and is nearer to Cartier-Bresson’s decisive moment than to Dyer’s ongoing moment.  I carry a camera wherever I go and am constantly on the look for that moment.  Local Communities are in constant change and the challenge is to record it.  

In the Landscape Module I left all of the assignments open ended so that I could return to them.  

My selection of photographic technique for each picture was very much dictated by the location and the available light.  The stained glass restorers work piece was backlit by flash as under normal light the old glass looked dark and gloomy.  The cycle gears were front lit by flash to bring out the harsh metallic quality of the subject and to show clearly the grimy hands of the repairer.  The dentist shot was taken using the surgery lights, while the fisherman shot was taken using natural light.  Each one presented a different problem that required a different answer.

With the exception of the flee market image and the Harbour Master’s hand, all the pictures were staged.   Even these two subjects were aware of me taking their pictures.

I have changed the last picture for one of a tailor.  I took a number of images that have not been used.  

The idea of this exercise was that of an exhibition within Deal; a town so small that the ownership of most of these hands would be pretty well known without the benefit of faces.  

As I said, I wanted to expand the idea presented in Assignment One, which was one of  Who serves Deal.  Although I wanted the individuals to be anonymous I wanted their rolls to be evident.  Perhaps I didn’t make this clear.  I agree that this could be an open and on going project but the remit of the Assignment was for 15 images.  As I said above, I took more than fifteen images an it was from these spares that I made a selection.  

Your criticism about the clarity of my blog is well founded, but unfortunately I haven’t a clue how to reorganise it.   Twice I have attempted to reorganise my blog and improve its look and accessibility.  This has not worked out well, with me crashing the blog each time and spend much time rebuilding it.  I was brought up in the days of Imperial and Olivetti typewriters, carbon paper and correction fluid.   The blog may not be brilliant but it is as good as it is going to be.

I would appreciate the benefit of a pre assessment tutorial.

Regards,


Barney Case,

Saturday 16 July 2016

Spain 2016.

Spain 2016.

A was recently asked to supply images for an office at North Deal Community Centre that has been designated a counselling  room.  While in Spain this year I was on the lookout for suitable subjects.  

Two of the images fit in rather well with this course; one with it's message about the separation of generation and the other the surreal juxtaposition of person and door.

I was drinking at a bar opposite a church, outside which the boys and the man were sat. The boys were alternately showing off to passing girls and playing with their phones.  The man on the bench got more and more agitated and eventually moved off.  His annoyance is clearly visible in this shot.


This second image was pure luck.  I was taking photographs of doors for my wife, who later uses them in her painting.  As I set up to photograph this strange door when my wife shouted that a nun was about to walk into shot.  As she came into the scene I took the shot.  The motion blur was not intended but works well to show movement.  A little perspective correction and the image was done.  








Monday 27 June 2016

Conclusion of Module.

This has, overall, been an enjoyable module with a reasonable amount of time allowed to actually take photographs.  The discipline of working to tight specifications has, at times, proved taxing.  I have been taking, selling and publishing photographs for the past forty years and it is difficult to change the way I see the world.  I hope I am open to new ideas and have, in the work I have produced, shown that an old dog can learn new tricks. 

Two photographers stand out from this course; the first, Martin Parr has grown from a photographer that I was aware of the a photographer that has become an inspiration, and whom I hope has an influence in my work.  The second is a man I was hardly aware but now admire, not only for his photography, but as an inspiration for life. That man is Gordon Parks.   Without bitterness he rose from very humble beginnings to a position where he could influence the whole of humanity.  

Essay writing has proved a problem. Most my previous writing, as a police officer, has been report writing about first hand experiences rather than the requirement of an formulating an argued position.  The Harvard notation system is a constant headache but I seem to be getting on top of it.

Should I be successful with this submission I will most certainly take a break and concentrate on a number of personal ventures I have been working on.

Saturday 25 June 2016


Conclusion to Part Five

The idea at the start was to remove people from their actions by featuring their hands alone rather than, as has been done before,  removing the whole person from their environment by placing them in a studio setting.

This process has totally anonymised them so they are represented by their actions alone.

Where and how will I present this work?  I already display my work in two venues in Deal and it is at one of these that I may hang these pictures with a little game of,  "Spot the hand".

I have worked on this alone as my tutor, Gina Lundy, is off on maternity leave.


Assignment five: Personal Project.

Assignment Five: Personal Project.

The first Assignment of this Documentary module asked each student to introduce their local community through pictures.  This I did by way of images of the local trades men and women with whom I interact on a daily basis.  

The images were recognisably people that one can see in and around Deal.  For assignment five I wanted to expand that idea and include things for which this area is famous, and have included such things as golf, bird-watching and our flea markets.  I have also included the theme of family with an image of one of my grandsons grandson holding my hand and another grandson practicing his maths.

The biggest change to the earlier piece is that this time I have anonymised the people in the images.  During this module I have seen photographers remove people from their environment by placing them in a studio or by photographing them in front of a white cloth, which has the same affect; removing them from their environment and isolating them.   This has the effect of making the viewer concentrate on the person and not the scene. See Eric Lafforque's work in The Daily Mail. (Lafforque, 2015) 

Elliott Erwitt famously portrayed people through their dogs by the expedient of either excluding most of the owners bodies or having the position of the dog block out the owner's details. (Erwitt, 1998).

It was a mixture of these ideas that that led me to take the following series of images which feature only the hands of the subjects.  I do not present them in any order.

Reference:
Erwitt, E. (1998). Dog Dogs. Phaidon. 

Lafforque E. (2015). "Moving portraits of the 'dying art' of tribal tattoos captured in West Africa, where scars are a symbol of beauty and children are cut to 'rid them of evil' " In The Daily Mail [online] At:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-3256606/Moving-portraits-dying-art-tribal-tattoos-captured-West-Africa-scars-symbol-beauty-children-cut-rid-evil.html






The Glazier.  
Corley's glass works carries out specialist repair work on old stained glass.



Butchery.
Deal has three butchers shops as well as a number of others that visit on market days.



Fisherman.
Deal, and especially the pier, is a very popular place for fisherman.  Here is one baiting a hook with a worm.



Flee market at Walmer.
The  Deal Braderie and the Walmer Brocante markets are annual street flea markets that attract both dealers and punters from far and wide. 



Money changes hand at flee market.
This actually me receiving change after buying two pieces of Poole pottery.  Bargain!



Dentist.
This image represents the many health centres and dentist in the town..



Drink and conversation.
Deal has over fifty pubs and restaurants.  Spoilt for choice.



The Artist.
The light found in this part of Kent attracts many artists.  J. M. W. Turner famously painted in this area, and George Rowlett still works does.



Cycle Repairer.
Deal is on the National Cycle Route One, which in this stretch is gloriously flat.



Harbour Master.
Colin Carr is the Harbour Master of Sandwich, which is one of Kent oldest harbours with a continuous history stretching back Roman times. 



The Music Scene.
Many of the pubs and restaurants have live music.  The Astor Theatre is an active community theatre hosting many musical acts.



Bird Watching.
The Sandwich Bird Observatory next to Sandwich Bay which is an area of national importance.



Golf.
Deal is ringed by five five golf courses including the Open Course of St. Georges.


Barman.
A welcome sight to be found in our many pubs.


The Tailor.
Are you being served?

The next image is one that was criticised in the feedback as being over sentimental.











Sunday 14 February 2016

Research Point: With a little help from my friends.

Research Point: With a little help from my friends.

Another dead link.

http://www.bjp-online.com/british-journal-of-photography/features/1936101/crowd-funding-little-help-friends

Entry on bpj's site:-

Oops! That page can’t be found.

Tried direct and indirect search for this item but to no avail.

Saturday 13 February 2016

Exercise: Kingsmead Eyes.

Exercise: Kingsmead Eyes.

I viewed the 2009 project first, and as I write this part, have not seen the Kingsmead Eyes Speak project.

I found this a fascinating project where the children were given a free hand to photograph, and talk about, what they found important and interesting.  Their histories, hopes, and fears were laid out in front of us.  Whilst realising the pictures featured were to pick of the crop they were of a commendable quality and insightful.

This has been, and in some ways still is, a very troubled part of London, but there is a feeling in this presentation that in the hands of these young people the future will be better.

The presentation was a mix of still photography, comment and poetry presented in non patronising way.   The voices were quite clearly those of the young people featured who all spoke with candour about Kingsmead.

2011 Eyes.

It has taken three days to look at, and listen to, the Kingsmead Eyes Speak project This made it too big a project to take in easily.  I broke it down by looking first at the still images taken by the children, which alone was in the region of 400 photographs.  The quality was very variable, and on the whole, not as spontaneous as in the 2009 project.  

I found the short video clips far more interesting as they gave voice to the children.  The mix of stills, video and voice within each of them held my attention far more that going through the stills alone.

The poetry allowed the children to speak about their fears and dreams.  There was a theme running through them of former lives and countries, now half forgotten, and the fear of further upheaval and movement.  

For me the best peices were the ones involving the training of the children and the other done with the parents, and how they, the parents, related to the project.  Even in this short clip it was evident that the parents went from wariness and nervousness to fully active participants in the project.

The question posed was, how did it work as a whole?

For me it was too big; how many people, not involved with it, worked their way through the whole thing?  The 2009 project worked better for a number of reasons.  First, there was better editing of the photographs and there were fewer of them.  Second, the children seemed to have had a freer hand so the images were more spontaneous.   Third, I could take it in in one sitting.


I am sure the children, their parents, the school and the community got a lot from both of these projects but as pieces for wider viewing the 2009 piece worked better.

Thursday 11 February 2016

Research Point: Photovoice.

Research Point: Photovoice.

Photovoice is a group I had not heard of until now, and that is the problem.  Their presentations are slick and polished, with clear aims and beautiful well shot photographs.  What isn’t so clear is what affect they are having. 

The two featured pieces on, Luke Hayes and Jean Jiemans, had no follow up.  I visited the Project Updates page there were no updates.  Likewise the Cafod and Christian Aid update pages showed only error messages.

All the featured projects seemed to be earnest and well intentioned but none seemed to have a conclusion.

The purpose of Photovoice is well described, with clear aims and targets but I am not sure who the audience is and what affect Photovoice is having.

Christian Aid’s Donor Communications Adviser, Amanda Farrant said:

“Putting a camera in their hands gives Ghanaian farmers a rare opportunity to highlight their needs and take more control over their lives. The result is a compelling set of images that portray a powerful message directly from the farmers.”  He doesn’t say who saw them and what the result was.

Wednesday 10 February 2016

Exercise: Postdocumentary Photography, Art and Ethics.

Exercise: Postdocumentary Photography, Art and Ethics.

A Summary of the salient points.

  • An examination of the relationship between ethics and aesthetics in documentary photography.  
  • Aesthetics has moved from its original understanding of viewing from a new stand point to one where it is now beholden only to itself.  
  • The media now see ethics and aesthetics as opposites.  Aesthetics can enlighten and broaden but all too often strangles and limits our view.
  • Post documentary photographers question themselves as to whether they are working to an ethical or aesthetics end.
  • Modern photographers are turning away from aesthetics and the judgement go others and being true to themselves.
  • Artist:- One who puts their individuality and creativity voice or shows an image in the public domain.  There is an attempt by some modern thinkers to restore the old ethics/aesthetics connection.
  • Photography allows for the subject and viewer to share space.  
  • Photographs can equally objectify their subject and murder their individuality.
  • Sontag says that photography has contributed at least as much to the numbing of our conscience as to its development.  An overpowering and detached aesthetics takes its toll.
  • The representation of documentary photography as a mirror of reality has led to its perversion into propaganda and indoctrination.
  • Photograph can be experienced as being reality, image showing truth without intervention by man.
  • Photography has in past decades been used to reinforce the dominant political view.  
  • Postcolonial attitudes have led to the position where there very truth of photography is in doubt.  Does it record or make truth.  Is its representing or inventing what is in the photograph.  
  • Early photography was employed to record facts: medical, architectural , and scientific.  They not only represented reality, they were reality.
  • The recording of images of the ill and suffering are now seen as an violation of the subjects dignity.  It made objects of them.  This objectification reached its height in the death camps of WW2.
  • A discussion about the work of Martha Rosler where her combination of word and pictures give her subjects, the residence of The Bowery, individuality and dignity.
  • The work of Allen Sekula is also discussed. His work is seines more aesthetic than Roslers and he both engages his subjects and controls the context and the relationship of pictures and words.
  • Representation - interpretation - counter-presentation.  Using the S-21 Cambodian terror pictures attentions drawn to how pictures of the most evil subjects can be reduced to works of art and in doing  so loose their reality.  A criticism was made  that the pictures subjects had no voice.
  • By reference to the Ab Graib  images it is pointed out that the subjects had been objectified long before the pictures were taken.
  • The images of the New York Twin Towers attack on 11th September rapidly turned from news footage to television spectacular.  Repeated over and over for the ratings and emotional response.  
  • Guy Debora said that we no longer live life, but actin a film, which we call life.  It is this world that keeps us prisoner, at the same time that it alienates us from reality.



  • Kieth Tester in his book The Inhuman Condition that we are over stimulated by instant reality and have no time to dwell on or contemplate what is happening in the world.  He argues that we must be able to alienate ourselves in the world and create a fracture within an indolent culture that seems to accept the greatest crimes against humanity as belonging to the order of the day.
  • The South African Kendell Geers appears to be try for this in his art where he portrays evil for its own sake.
  • Alain Badiou is close to Tester’s suggestion own the world,except that Badiou has doubts about whether it cane a “conscious” choice.  Badiou typifies “the artist” as someone who, as a result of a deeply encroaching, often traumatic event, feels the necessity to pursue a personal truth and to remain faithful to it in spite of considerable opposition.  According to this argument, being an artist and ethics are inextricably bound up with each other.
  • Badiou appears to dismiss the form of ethics that is found bound up in legislation and instead believes in a looking for an initiating, active and processional form instead; a concrete form and not an abstract form.
  • Badiou argues that truth cannot be communicated, It is not just a matter of opinions.  Truth is encountered it is something that happens to you.  
  • The notion of evil is introduced.  He boundary between good and evil, he claims, is wafer thin.  He give three examples: the following a pseudo truth, not being able to  be faithful to a truth process, the following of a single truth that has total power.
  • Martha Rosler argues that unlike past documentary photographer, todays photographers are happy to record the world as it is rather than trying to change it.  These neutral images are too easily absorbed into the system and made harmless.  By using the Badiou approach of highlighting “the other” it is possible to influence the world.  Is this the point of photography?
  • We, as photographers, should not be just recording the world but in our images adding something to it.  Teach viewers to see differently; to have a moment of insight.

This is where ethics and aesthetics merge.  An image that shows more than just the thing itself has the potential to have both an ethic and aesthetic appeal.  Both the maker and the viewer have their part to play in this.  By approaching this with an open mind will allow ethics and aesthetics, in partnership, to achieve a great deal.  

Friday 5 February 2016

Exercise. Jim Goldberg. Open See.

Exercise.

Jim Goldberg.  Open See.

This exhibition is a new avenue for documentary photography and its display.  The items are a mixture of Goldberg’s photographs, found images, found objects, and personal stories.  The Polaroid pictures with the subjects input are, to me, the most interesting as Goldberg as involved the participants of this sorry tale in a very personal way.   In an interview in The Guardian in 2009 Goldberg is quoted as saying, “"In Europe, I am an outsider, I don't really understand anything that I am seeing”.  It is probably this that allows Goldberg to approach this subject without any obvious bias.  

As a documentary series in the gallery these images work well, but only as a whole.  It is the number of images and their attached stories that give them relevance.  Without the stories the pictures, for me, don’t hold up.  

The short film and commentary about the sinking boat worked well, especially as the story is told by a voice that did not not survive the sinking.  

Whether this exhibition worked in the real world can be seen in the number of people, deserving and underserving, who still risk, and lose, their lives in their attempt to enter Europe.


http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2009/nov/01/jim-goldberg-open-see-review

Wednesday 3 February 2016

Exercise: The Judgement Seat of Photography.

Exercise: The Judgement Seat of Photography.

From a photographic print, for example, one can make a number of prints; to ask for the “authentic” point makes no sense.
That which withers in the age of mechanical reproduction is the aura of the work of art.
Walter Benjamin, “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction”.

My ideal is to produce numberless prints from each negative, prints all significantly alive, yet indistinguishably alike and to be able to circulate them at a price no higher than the price of a popular magazine or daily paper.  To gain that ability there has been no choice but to follow the path that I have chosen.
Alfred Stieglitz, catalogue preface to his exhibition at the Anderson Galleries 1921.

Industrial simulacrum.
Jean Baudrillard, L’Exchange symbolique et la mort, Paris, Editions Gallimard, 1976.

A photographic print is a much less predictable product that the print from an engraving or an etching plate.  The likelihood of a photographer’s being able truly to duplicate an earlier print is very slight.
John Szarkowski,  “Photography and the Private Collector”.  Aperture, vol 15 1970.

A the singular original gave way to the plurality of increasingly praise copies, so wold the previously unbridgeable gap between art and its audience give way to universal availability and accessibility.
Christopher Phillips, The judgement Seat of Photography.

Mohly-Nagy, Photokunst.  Stieglitz, Kunstphotographie.
Photographic art versus art photography.

What is lacking in the present exhibition is an assessment of photography in terms of pure aesthetic merit-
Lewis Mumford,  “The Art Galleries”,  The New Yorker, 3rd April ,1937.

Newell likewise located two main traditions of aesthetic satisfaction in photography: from the optical side, the detail, and from the chemical side, tonal fidelity.
Christopher Phillips, The judgement Seat of Photography.

The melancholy beauty of the condemned and vanished past.
Newell, Photography: 1839-1937.

Each print is an individual personal expression.
Beaumont Newhall, “The Exhibition: Sixty Photographs”, The Bulletins of the Museum of Modern Art, vol. 8 no. 2 (December-January 1940-41), 5.



On Civil War photographs taken by Brady and Co. Newhall, while admitting that they were “without any implied aesthetic intent” claimed them for art on the grounds that they seemed, to him, undeniably “tragic and beautiful”.
Beaumont Newhall, “Photography as an Art”, in A Pageant of Photography.

“American Photographs at $10.”
The exhibition and sale is an experiment to encourage the collecting of photographs for decoration and pleasure.  Once a photographer has worked out a suitable relationship between grade of paper, exposure and development to make one fine print, he can at the same time make many more of identical quality.  Thus the unit cost can be lowered.
Wall label for “American Photographs at $10. MoMO.

Dorner hailed the Bauhaus for its “ explosive transformation the very idea art; bursting with energies which, once set to work in the practical context of life, might well influence life on a tremendous practical scale”.
Dorner, The Way Beyond Art.

The modern exhibition should not retain its distance from the spectator, it should be brought close to him, penetrate and leave an impression on him, should explain, demonstrate, and even persuade and lead him to a planned and direct reaction.  Therefor we may say that exhibition design runs parallel with the psychology  of advertising.
Herbert Bayer, “Fundamentals of Exhibition Design”, Production Manager, December/January 1939/40.

During the war I collected photographs and organised an exhibition called “Road to Victory”, and it was that exhibition which gave ideas to the board of directors of the Museum.  Here was something new in photography to them. Here were photographs that were not simply placed there for their aesthetic values.  Here were photographs used as a force and people flocked to see it.  People who ordinarily never visited the museum came to see this.  So they passed the proposition on to me that I keep on along those lines.
Edward Steichen, “Photography and the Art Museum”, in Museum Service, June 1948.

On the 1942 Road to Victory exhibition.
The photographs are displayed by Bayer as photographs have never been displayed before.  They don't sit quietly on the wall.  They jut out from the walls and from the floors to assault your vision.
Ralph Steiner, Production Manager, 31st May 1942.

A rough summary of Edward Steichen’s operation procedures.
To prise photographs from their original contexts, to discard or alter their captions, to record their borders in the enforcement of a unitary meaning, to reprint them for dramatic impact, to redistribute them in new narrative chains consistent with a predetermined thesis.

Ansel Adams on this style of exhibition.
The success application of such techniques entails, of course, two major factors: the all-but-total disappearance of the individual photographers within the larger fabric, and a disregard of the supposed personal- expressive qualities of the “fine print”.  
The quality of the prints-of all his exhibits of this gross character-was very poor…. If a great Museum represented photography in such a style and quality, why bother about the subtle qualities of the image and the fine print?

For the modern photographer the end product of his efforts is the printed page, not the graphic print… The modern photographer does not think of photography as an art or his photograph as an art object.
Irving Penn, “What is Modern Photography”, American Photography, March 1951.

A survey of the installation views of MoMO’s photographic exhibitions from the early 1960s to the present induces a dizzying realisation of the speed of photography’s repackaging.  Steichen’s hyperactive, chock-a-block displays metamorphosed before one’s eyes into the cool white spaces of sparsely hung galleries.
Christopher Phillips, The judgement Seat of Photography.

During photography's first century it was generally understood…that what photography did best was to describe things: their shape and textures and the situations and relationships.  The highest virtues of such photographs were clarity of statement and density of information.  They could be read as well as seen; their value was literary and intellectual as well as visceral and visual.
Szarkowski,  “Photography and Mass Media”.
Szarkowski recommended to younger photographers the works of Atget, Sander, and Francis Benjamin Johnson-all “deliberate and descriptive; constructed with the poise and stability which suggest Poussin or Piero.  Such pictures are not only good to look at, they are good to contemplate.”

For Szarkowski, it does not follow that one ought to seek a supplement to the image beyond the frame. (What is at stake,after all, is the self-sufficiency of the photograph.)  He recommends, instead, a particular mode of transformation of pictorial content: “If photographs could not be read as stories, they could be read as symbols”.
John Szarkowski, The Photographer’s Eye, New York, MoMA, 1965.

On press photographs.
They could be seen, in Szarkowski’s word, as “short visual poems-they describe a simple perception out of context”.
John Szarkowski, From the Picture Press, New York, MoMO, 1973.

On Winogrand.
As we study his photographs, we recognise that although in the conventional sense they may be impersonal, they are also consistently informed by what in a poem we would call a voice.  This voice is, in turn, comic, harsh, ironic, delighted,, and even cruel. But it is always active and distinct-always, in fact, a narrative voice.
John Szarkowski, “American Photography and the Frontier Tradition”. 1979.

Thus endowed with a privileged origin-in painting-and an inherent nature that is modernist avant la lettre , photography is removed to its own aesthetic realm, free to get on with its vocation of producing “millions of profoundly radical pictures.” As should be apparent, this version of photographic history is, in truth, a flight from history, from history’s reversals, repudiations, and multiple determinations.  The dual sentence spelled out here-the formal isolation and cultural legitimation of the “great undifferentiated whole” of photography-is the disquieting message handed down from the museum’s judgement seat.

Christopher Phillips, The judgement Seat of Photography.

Saturday 30 January 2016

Part five. Project: Documentary and the gallery space. Exercise. Cruel and Tender.

Part Five.

Project: Documentary and the gallery space.

Exercise. Cruel and Tender.

Another broken link. Luckily I have a copy of Cruel and Tender and downloaded the brochure directly from the Tate web site.  

What comes across from viewing the photographs is how impersonal they are.  The images manage to remove the people from their personality.  While lacking warmth they manage to convey a feeling of the times and circumstance of their taking.  

The images taken by Boris Mikhailov are a cold representation of the the Russia we are not supposed to see; cold, dirty, and desperate.

Likewise with the images of William Eggleston with their portrayal of rural America which he shows as class ridden, lonely, and materialistic.

All through the book there are beautiful images that highlight the contradictions of the times in which they were taken.

Rineke Dijkstra.

I must state at the outset that I do not understand the images of the new mothers.  Be it my age or gender but I can find no beauty or relevance in them.  Perhaps they are too personal or too raw, but I fail to see what Dijkstra saw.  

The images of the bull fighters I find far more interesting.  These are the faces of ordinary men who are extraordinarily brave.  They risk their lives for, what must be, the highest of adrenalin rushes.  To pit themselves against an animal that, if it could, would kill them.  Removing them from the bull ring and isolating them in this way allows one to see the evidence of their encounters and look into their eyes.  

Fazal Sheikh.

Somalia is a country in name alone without governance or effective government.  Ruled, as it is, by warlords and tribal leaders all the population can do in hard times is to flee to other countries, like Kenya, that do have functioning governments.  

The pictures taken by Sheikh demonstrate the plight of these people.  All they can do in times of need is to make their way to refuge centres and wait for the world to feed them.  It can’t help that the population of Somalia has grown from 2.5 million in 1960 to over 10 million today.  The picture of Amina Ahmed Abdi (mother of ten) points to the future problems of Somalia.  What chance does such a poor country have if it nearly doubles it's population every25 years.

The technique of having his subjects looking straight into the lens lifts them from their surrounding and again, as with Dijkstra, allows one to look into their eyes and souls.