Monthly Archive for July, 2019

Hubert Barre – Le Quartier St. Antoine

Hubert Barre

Le Quartier St. Antoine

Ah matočka, they are really poor! And what a mess! But it is hardly surprising: the whole family lives in a single room, divided by small screens, for their decency.

                                                                               Fëdor Dostoevskij

Jacques, Paul, Guy, Jacquot, Serge, Marie, Hamidi… only an evanescent shadow of them has remained, spat out from the memory in the form of names. Fragments of memories, which goes back to three decades ago. They all lived in Aubenas, in the Saint-Antoine quarter, the poorest in the city. Thirty years ago. Today they are no longer there and it is not hard to imagine that they are no longer even on this earth. 

 

 

To remember them today is only the memory of a few and the portraits that represent them in a daily life made of tangible poverty, of daily hardship and precariousness, of difficulty and miserable belongings. A situation testified by images that, in the absence of diachronic references, rarely offer footholds to hazard a reliable dating. The faces of Jacques, Paul, Guy, Jacquot, Serge, Marie, Hamidi, often crushed by the brutality of the flash, are timeless. Even the environments and objects around them are not of great help in most cases and could even distort the reading by a number of decades.

 

 

Of course, when one runs into an image in which a Mercedes appears in the background, today we should by now say an old Mercedes… we then realise that the counting of the decades stops at three. We are at the end of the eighties, although of many of the pictures we would be tempted to say are at least from the fifties, if not before. The atmosphere emanated by the prints is difficult to define. On the one hand the dark tones lead us to a denseness that seems to adhere to the conditions of the subjects, on the other there is energy sometimes subterranean sometimes explicit that agitates between the shades between black and white. 

If we were to frame these photographs within a theoretical grid of image reading, speaking about the contents we could not fail to notice the recurring presence of the thematic factor of the relationship. Many of these images refer to the relationships that are between the subjects, strong relationships, born from sharing little, of the mutual support in the hardship. Relationships that emanate a force, probably necessary, possibly desperate, certainly powerful. And perhaps this is the energy that is felt flowing under the surface of the paper, leafing through images that tell us about a quarter that today is no longer as thirty years ago.

 

 

The houses have disappeared. Jacques, Paul, Guy, Jacquot, Serge, Marie, Hamidi are not there. Times have changed one might say abusing without necessity of a common bourgeois place. And this cannot help us to reflect on the role of the medium of photography. If it is true that for thousands of years the human being has continued to evolve without which his image being mechanically declined as an analogon referent, it is also true that the iconic memory offered by photography represents a possible object of stimulus to the self-consciousness. The risk, however, is that in the superabundance and ease of production of the images these become… invisible to the eyes of most. In the face of images that are self-replicating in the reproduction of pre-established clichés, photographs that remind us of where we come from are important, probably because they allow us not to recognize ourselves as we see, fighting the homologation. 

And in a Western society that in spite of its globalised crises is still able to live well beyond its needs, joining with the vital energy flowing in the portraits of the inhabitants of Saint-Antoine of thirty years ago can be a valid counterpoint to our daily dissatisfaction. 

 

Short Bio

Born in FRIBOURG (RFA) in 1962, he attended the Lycée Technique Astier in Aubenas, to then enrol afterwards at the INSA (Institut Nationale des Sciences Appliquées) in Lyon.
Between 1985 and 1986, he worked for the press service of the French armed forces in Berlin as a photographer. In 1987 he dedicated himself to the story of the Saint-Antoine quarter in Aubenas en Ardèche, the work, which we are now presenting in these pages. Two years later, in 1989, he exhibited the portraits taken in Saint-Antoine and won first prize in the photography competition organised by the magazine Le généraliste. Numerous are the exhibitions that have taken place over the years until December 2014, when he exhibited, in collaboration with the Voies Off in Arles, at the Theatre Commedia d’Aubagne, and again in the following July at the Musée de la Légion Étrangère. On the occasion of the 2016 edition of Voies Off, he exhibited within the Arlesian event his work Clôture monastique, devoted to the life in the cloistered monasteries. Always at the Voies Off 2016 he presented us with his work at the portfolio reading and hence this article was born.

 

Related Links

facebook.com/hubert.barre.9

 

Hannes Jung – How is life?

Hannes Jung

How is life?

Death follows life. Always. A fact that unites all and everyone of us. As a young person I expect too die when I’m old, maybe when I’m sick, but definitely not now. So much still lies ahead of me. For the ones who are left behind, suicide always raises the question of life. Why did someone choose death over life?

The suicide rate in Lithuania is nearly three times as high as the average rate in the European Union. It is even among the highest in the world. Looking at the bigger picture, suicides occur more frequently in bigger cities. Whereas in rural areas, less people lose hope in life since social ties are still stronger. In Lithuania, on the contrary, more people commit suicide on the countryside. Especially men between 40 and 50 years of age are at a high risk to commit suicide. Alcoholism, unemployment, no perspective, and many other cases with reasons that are hard to find and even harder to understand.

 

 

The reasons for each suicide are different. They are not an expression of personal freedom, but often affected by hopelessness and diseases. Outer, social and environmental factors also play a big role among them. Since World War II and starting with the Soviet occupation the suicide rate for men, at times, grew from ten suicides per 100,000 inhabitants to 90 annually. Experts speak about a collective trauma and loss of identity – influenced among others by forced collectivization of the farms in rural areas through the Soviets. But the reasons for each suicide are always more complex and personal and can not mainly be related to the countries trauma.

 

 

My story “How is Life?” is not just about photography. I worked together with the protagonists and asked them to write down their personal story. These statements (see the captions) are an essential part of this project.

I photograph life not death because death cannot be seen. Maybe you can’t take pictures of the wind. But you could try to catch the consequences of the wind, bending trees and rolling waves.

 

Short Bio

Hannes Jung (b. 1986) is a freelance documentary photographer currently based in Berlin. He studied photography and photojournalism in Munich, Hannover and Valencia and attended the Eddie Adams Workshop. Hannes is represented by Laif photo agency.
His work was recognized with Gold in the categories Documentary and Interpretative eye by the College Photographer of the Year award (CPOY) and he recieved several prizes like the n-ost Reportage prize, Prix Mark Grosset, South Tyrol Media award or Canon Profifoto promotion award. His work was supported with several research grants from n-ost, the Robert-Bosch-Foundation and VG Bildkunst. Hannes work was shown in several exhibitions and festivals around Europe.

 

Related Links

hannesjung.com

 

Partha Sengupta – The Bloodiest Border

Partha Sengupta

The Bloodiest Border

I’m a descendent of a refugee family from East Bengal (now Bangladesh) part of Bengal province during British rule, was a vast land of various creeds, cultures and a common language Bangla.

During Partition of India in 1947, an international border drawn Bengal area into East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) and West Bengal (in India). The border changed the social fabric of the vast land with a new nationality with a strong sectarian belief. Since then the border denotes heavily guarded by paramilitary forces; human rights abuse and suspicions.

 

 

In the Indian side, BSF (Border Security Force of India) managed the international border. Their attitude towards the border people is with deep suspicion with extra judicial killings, custodial death and torture. Prevalence of cross border smuggling and infiltration in this region is how the security forces justified their atrocities. In 2011 Human Rights Watch termed BSF “Trigger Happy” for their notoriety.

Similarity of look and language of the border people has led to confusion of identity with regards to their nationality. Security forces ignored the history of this region, justified their atrocities is the only option to deal with the border people whose national identity is debatable.

 

 

My project is the exploration of borders and its impact on the lives of the border people, where one’s own national identity is debatable. It raises the critical questions about the idea of border is enforced, the complexities of history, lives, culture and nationalists imaginary.

First time in November 2014, I traveled to Bangladesh, as an Indian underwent immigration procedures being a foreigner. Once Bangladesh was the natural place of my parents and family home was there. The partition had changed the equations of my parents who are now foreigners cease the generational old identity. The British Colonial Rule brought a sense of communal identity and animosity with the changes in Hindu-Muslims relations.

 

 

 

Short Bio

Partha Sengupta (b. 1975) is a Kolkata based Indian documentary photographer. He is a late entrant into photography after leaving his banking career in 2012. Partha studied documentary photography mentorship at Counter Foto, Bangladesh. In 2012, he joined in a local newspaper in Kolkata and worked for three years. Since 2015, he started to work independently. His images were exhibited in the Asian Cultural Heritage in Montreal, Canada in 2012. In 2014, he was selected among fourteen young photographers by German Science & Arts for a photography project in India. His work along with other photographers published in the book ‘The India Vision Quest’ by DWIH in 2015. His works had been exhibited in Kolkata, Dhaka, Ahmedabad, Delhi, Montreal, Cologne and forthcoming at Goa in 2018. In 2018, Partha received s grant from Serendipity Arts Foundation on the photography project “Bhumiputra”. He did his post-graduation in Management and Finance. He is versed with several Indian languages.

 

Related Links

parthasengupta.wordpress.com

 

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The Emerging Photographer Fund is supported by generous donors to the Magnum Foundation

Magnum Foundation