Thursday, March 13, 2014
Go To The Following Link To View An Extraordinary Face Of Our Humanity
http://www.survivalinternational.org/galleries?utm_source=Survival+International&utm_campaign=9cfecd6d09-March_Photo_competition_USA_3_13_2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_241e47c256-9cfecd6d09-86583370
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Ethiopia: Danakil Woman Herding Goats In Danakil Depression
Hardly visible against her mostly grayish background, a Danakil woman is
herding goats in Ethiopia’s Danakil Depression.
--
Difficilement visible contre un fond gris, une femme
Danakil conduit ses nombreuses chèvres au pâturage dans la dépression Danakil,
en Ethiopie.
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Cameroon: Image Of Power And Privilege
Monument at the entrance of a
chief’s compound near Foumbot, Cameroon.
--
Monument a l’entrée d’une propriété
de chef près de Foumbot, au Cameroun.
Monday, March 10, 2014
Life Under A Philippines Volcano
Plowing a rice field under Mayon Volcano near Legazpi, in the Philippines’
Luzon Isand.
--
Labourant un champ de riz sous le volcan Mayon près de
Legazpi, dans l’île philippine de Luzon.
Sunday, March 9, 2014
Africa: Women's Burden
Anuak sisters pounding and winnowing corn inside their family hut near Gambela,
Ethiopia.
--
Petites
sœurs Anuak pilent et vannent du maïs dans leur hutte familiale près de Gambela,
en Ethiopie
Saturday, March 8, 2014
Ethiopia: Anouak Mother And Baby
An Anouak mother enjoys her baby outside her hut near Gambela, Ethiopia.
--
Une mère Anouak jouit de son bébé hors de sa hutte près
de Gambela, en Ethiopie.
Friday, March 7, 2014
Niger: Tuareg Women Portrait
This additional photo of my 1969 Sahel journey shows two Tuareg girls sheltering
in their tent from the mid-day sun.
--
Cette nouvelle photo de mon séjour au Sahel de 1969
montre deux jeunes filles touarègues s’abritant du soleil de midi sous leur
tente.
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Niger:Tuareg Nomads Riding Donkeys From The Well
Another picture from my 1969 Sahel journey. The one I posted yesterday
was of Wodaabe nomads. This one is of Tuareg nomads riding away from a well. Water-filled
goat skin bags hang from the bellies of their donkeys.
--
Une autre photo de mon séjour de 1969 au Sahel. La
photo d’hier était de nomades Wodaabe (Bororo). Celle-ci montre des femmes Touarègues
s’éloignant d’un puits. Des outres de peau de chèvres remplies d’eau pendent
sous le ventre de leurs ânes.
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Niger: Wodaabe Nomads On The Way To A Dance
In 1969, when I took this picture, black-and-white was still much in use
because it was much cheaper to print. Still, I needed to shoot in color as
well, which I did. Because zoom lenses had not yet reached professional quality
I used only primary lenses. And to be ready for anything happening, I always worked
with two cameras, a Leica M2 with a 35 mm lens and a Nikon F with a 105 mm
lens. I also carried a similar pair of cameras so equipped to shoot black-and-white.
Thankfully, those cameras were relatively small and light compared to
professional digital cameras today, of which you need only one toady for any situation. Additionally, for when I had the time to
change lenses, I carried Nikon lenses of 20, 28, and 50
mm in a pouch on my belt. Still, I used my Leica the most, as it was the easiest to hide when necessary
to shoot unobtrusively, and because I liked to shoot close to my subjects.
I shot this picture in Niger’s Sahel while working on four books on
African children of different countries. But my experience with this tribe, the
Woodabe, and that of the Tuareg, who I was also shooting there, got me the
following year a National Geographic
assignment to do a chapter on each of those tribes for their book, Nomads of the World. At that time I
would shoot only color.
The men here are singing at the rhythm of their companion’s hand-clapping.
They are on their way to a Yakey dance, which doubles as a male beauty contest,
where they will grimace comically, rolling eyes and showing teeth to display their
whiteness, as I have shown in previous posts.
--
Photo de 1969 de nomades Wodaabe, connus aussi comme
Bororo, en chemin vers un yakey, une
danse qui est à la fois un concours de beauté masculine. Joyeux, ils
chantent, rythmés par les battements de mains de leur compagnon.
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Bolivia: Haunting Face Of The Altiplano
One of the many stunning faces of Bolivia’s mineral southern Altiplano,
a high and bitter cold plateau between two Andean cordilleras, home to Quechua miners
and llama and alpaca herder.
--
L’un des extraordinaires visages du minéral Altiplano
bolivien, un haut plateau glacé entre deux cordillères andines, terre d’indiens
Quechua, mineurs et éleveurs de lamas et alpacas.
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