Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

From The Feminist Lens

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • From The Feminist Lens

    FROM THE FEMINIST LENS

    The Hindu, India
    July 9 2013

    by Surekha Kadapa-Bose

    Women photographers travel the globe recording stories of triumphs
    and tribulations of the world as they see it

    "The camera gives me power and I become brave," says Anahit
    Hayrapetyan, 32, a photojournalist based in Yerevan, the historical
    capital city of Armenia, a former Soviet bloc country. "It's not easy
    for me to go out with a camera in my hands but once I am out there,
    everything changes. My camera is my motivation, my interest, my soul,
    my tears... [It's my] life," adds the talented lens-woman.

    Photographing the life and times of girls and women in her country
    has been like a mission for Anahit ever since she started taking
    pictures in 2005. Although she admits she has an emotional connect
    with every story she has clicked, one of her most moving works yet
    has been the 'Princess to Slave' project that depicts the various
    forms of violence Armenian women face - be it physical, sexual,
    psychological or gender discrimination.

    Like Anahit, Russia-born Irina Popova, 27, also trains her lens on
    the everyday woman. From photographing an unusual family living on
    the streets of St Petersburg to covering a war zone, she has done
    varied work.

    Anahit and Irina are part of an increasing tribe of women
    photojournalists from around the world, who are using their evocative
    photography to showcase the diverse challenges faced by women. They
    may be living in Tver (Russia), Paris (France) or Yerevan (Armenia),
    but they willingly travel to far-flung regions like Abkhazia, Cuba,
    Morocco or India to shoot women and present their hitherto unexpressed
    fears, apprehensions and problems.

    Violence against women is a subject dear to Anahit's heart. As part
    of 'The Other Side Of Europe' project, which has roped in various
    well-known photographers from Eastern Europe to present an "inside
    view" of the region, she writes, "I believe that problems can be
    solved only if we speak out; otherwise they will stay hidden in our
    society, and the society will stay sick....hiding violence can bring
    death...Women must know their rights and bring these problems out
    into the open."

    Anahit recalls an incident involving the death of a young woman. "It
    was the funeral of a young, pregnant and beautiful woman. She was in
    white... her family wasn't rich. While her family insisted that she
    was killed, the husband's family maintained that she had committed
    suicide. At that time my son had just been born. I had to go to their
    house then return to feed my son and then go back there again.

    Emotionally, it was one of the most difficult days of my life," reveals
    this mother of two, who has worked with National Geographic Traveller
    Armenia, Institute for War & Peace Reporting and Radio Free Europe/
    Radio Liberty, among others.

    It's the unusual subjects that attract the artist in Irina,
    who has many accolades to her name, including the title of the
    Best Photographer of Russia, which she won in The Best Photo Story
    category. The works she has produced over the last few years clearly
    demonstrate her interests - she has photographed Cuban women, captured
    Georgia during war, and even told the story of two-year-old Anfisa and
    her parents, who are punks and heavy drug abusers. The last feature
    created quite a sensation in the Western media.

    "I love to interact with people who are not part of 'real' life. I too
    had no 'real life' and that's why I took up photography. I [love to]
    travel for my stories and pick out my destinations [depending on what
    interests me]," she says.

    One such destination Irina chose was strife-torn Georgia, located in
    Eastern Europe. Over the last couple of decades, relations between
    Russia and Georgia have been quite tense, especially because of
    Moscow's support for separatist sentiments in Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia. Irina has been a witness to the violence that had unfolded
    in Abkhazia some years ago. She recalls, "I reached there a month
    before the war. When I saw a Russian military camp in the actual
    conflict zone I started to shoot immediately. There were about a
    hundred tanks crossing over from the Russian side."

    On that occasion Irina was arrested and questioned for an entire day.

    The authorities deleted all her pictures, even the ones that were not
    related to the war zone. While she was shaken up by the incident -
    "as a photographer if you witness something unwanted then you're in
    real danger" - she does not regret her decision to go there.

    While Anahit and Irina tell stories of social impact, war, drugs,
    subcultures and faith, Italian Guia Besana, 41, who is based in Paris,
    is equally at ease with shooting a corporate project for a leading
    international chain of coffee shops or portraying the lonely lives of
    AIDS victims in Swaziland. A Marie Claire Photography Award (2012)
    finalist, whose works have been recognised on various photography
    platforms, Guia says, "All my projects have touched me. 'Traces',
    which was about AIDS victims left a very deep impression on me as
    did the project 'She', a poignant story that expressed the conflict
    of Laura, the first man in Italy who underwent a sex-change surgery."

    On her website, Guia describes how she is "very drawn to my subjects
    that have conflict and contradictions". She describes her meeting
    with Laura, "I listened to her story trying to fix gestures that could
    well represent her strong personality. I discovered an elegant woman,
    an excellent cook, a wise and creative friend.... My desire was to
    bring alive this project through images representing my personal
    vision of her, her disguises, of fiction and non fiction, showing a
    fragment of her soul."

    Of course, it isn't easy doing the kind of work these women do. As
    is evident from Irina's experience, many a time they not only face
    the wrath of the State but also public ire. Irina puts it this way,
    "Everyone asks what a photographer does when s/he sees a situation
    that needs intervening. That's a heavy moral dilemma. But there are
    also times when a photographer becomes the victim. I feel photographers
    in general face a lot of aggression."

    Anahit adds, "Very often I do face problems from the police and even
    ordinary people but I try not to notice them. The main idea is to
    just go out and start taking pictures."

    What about the time they invest in striking a relationship with their
    subjects? Do they go back once they have moved on to something new?

    All of them unanimously declare that they make it a point to stay
    in touch. Anahit still tracks the lives of the refugees she met in a
    building as part of her maiden project. She says, "The kids from that
    building are now living in apartments. They have all grown up. One
    of them is a boxing champion in Armenia now. Soon, I plan to shoot
    a small story about him [and his journey of becoming] a boxer."

    The protagonists of her 'Cuban Women' project are still in touch with
    Irina and have even sought her help in finding eligible Western men!

    "Occasionally, I show these photos to my audience, telling them the
    stories of these girls and asking if anyone would be interested in
    marrying one of them. Usually, people simply laugh," reveals Irina.

    Women photographers are indeed a unique species - they take risks,
    they make lasting relationships with their subjects, they strive to
    capture unseen realities. And they do all this in the hope of making
    the world a better place. (Women's Feature Service)

    http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Delhi/from-the-feminist-lens/article4895013.ece

Working...
X