Reportage Photography Workshops is a series of photography workshops on location in the most fascinating cities and outposts of Asia and further afield. Interacting closely with world-renowned photojournalists with long experience in the region, participants take on assignments aimed at advancing their photographic skills and vision. The intensive dawn-to-dusk courses involve challenging fieldwork, formal and informal critiques, editing sessions, evening projections and open discussion. In a stunning Asian setting, participants fully engage with the local culture and environment and learn how to create photographic reportage to the highest standard.
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Conflict, Ethics, Photographs, Photojournalism, Poetry, Social Comment, Veracity, War, Workshop News, x/100
War Photographer
In Ethics on August 12, 2011 at 4:04 AMWar Photographer
In his darkroom he is finally alonewith spools of suffering set out in ordered rows.
The only light is red and softly glows,
as though this were a church and he
a priest preparing to intone a Mass.
Belfast. Beirut. Phnom Penh. All flesh is grass. He has a job to do. Solutions slop in trays
beneath his hands which did not tremble then
though seem to now. Rural England. Home again
to ordinary pain which simple weather can dispel,
to fields which don’t explode beneath the feet
of running children in a nightmare heat. Something is happening. A stranger’s features
faintly start to twist before his eyes,
a half-formed ghost. He remembers the cries
of this man’s wife, how he sought approval
without words to do what someone must
and how the blood stained into foreign dust. A hundred agonies in black-and-white
from which his editor will pick out five or six
for Sunday’s supplement. The reader’s eyeballs prick
with tears between bath and pre-lunch beers.
From an aeroplane he stares impassively at where
he earns a living and they do not care.
War Photographer by Carol Ann Duffy
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