POST BY: JUOZAS CERNIUS All photographs by Juozas Cernius, Cernuis.ly Editors note: BLNK is ongoing series of
photo essays documenting art works and events we deem notable.
Not exact matches
The culminating point was reached by LIFE magazine, which
documented in
photo essay form the life and times of the Western world during the forties and fifties.
In Our Global Village In 2007, after the publication of the
photo essay book In Our Village: Kambi ya Simba Through the Eyes of Its Youth, WKCD's Barbara Cervone teamed up with international service learning consultant Cathryn B. Kaye to invite young people across the globe to
document daily life in the places they call home.
This could be in the form of an
essay, a spreadsheet, a report, a set of
photos, a video, a scanned
document, or any one of a range of permitted types of digital files.
This slim
photo -
essay documents the true story of 12 - year - old Edi and his family, who were forced to leave their home in Gnjilane, Kosovo, and live for two months in a refugee camp.
This
photo journalism
essay documents the life and hard times of stray and abandoned dogs on a beach in southeast Puerto Rico.
He's
documented his 30 - course evening in an entertaining comic strip /
photo essay.
The process was
documented in Hollis Frampton's tongue - in - cheek
photo essay The Secret World of Frank Stella, which showed the artist approaching canvases as he would a house — as a space to be filled by increasingly proximate concentric lines.
This
photo essay of Ridgewood monuments
document the details of her neighborhood and within it, the objects of her attention.
• Ogden Museum of Southern Art, Board of Trustees, (2018 to - present) • New Orleans
Photo Alliance, Board of Directors, (2017 to - present) • Photographed Leah Chase for the cover of the Spring 2018 issue of Louisiana Cultural Vistas • Photographed the cover of the Spring 2017 issue of Gravy, a publication from the Southern Foodways Alliance • Photographed the cover and a photo essay for the Summer 2016 issue of Louisiana Cultural Vistas • Documented the Mississippi Gulf Coast with the Mississippi Arts Commission for the state's bicentennial, 2017 • Featured in the The New York Times and NPR for work in The Rising, at the Ogden's • Licensed a photograph to HBO's Treme for the opening credits of the fourth and final season, 2013 • Work is in the Wedge Collection in Toronto and private collections in Alabama, Louisiana and New
Photo Alliance, Board of Directors, (2017 to - present) • Photographed Leah Chase for the cover of the Spring 2018 issue of Louisiana Cultural Vistas • Photographed the cover of the Spring 2017 issue of Gravy, a publication from the Southern Foodways Alliance • Photographed the cover and a
photo essay for the Summer 2016 issue of Louisiana Cultural Vistas • Documented the Mississippi Gulf Coast with the Mississippi Arts Commission for the state's bicentennial, 2017 • Featured in the The New York Times and NPR for work in The Rising, at the Ogden's • Licensed a photograph to HBO's Treme for the opening credits of the fourth and final season, 2013 • Work is in the Wedge Collection in Toronto and private collections in Alabama, Louisiana and New
photo essay for the Summer 2016 issue of Louisiana Cultural Vistas •
Documented the Mississippi Gulf Coast with the Mississippi Arts Commission for the state's bicentennial, 2017 • Featured in the The New York Times and NPR for work in The Rising, at the Ogden's • Licensed a photograph to HBO's Treme for the opening credits of the fourth and final season, 2013 • Work is in the Wedge Collection in Toronto and private collections in Alabama, Louisiana and New York
Documenting Disposable People features newly commissioned
photo essays by eight renowned Magnum photographers — Ian Berry, Stuart Franklin, Jim Goldberg, Susan Meiselas, Paolo Pellegrin, Chris Steele - Perkins and Alex Webb — on diverse instances of contemporary global slavery.
In Our Global Village In 2007, after the publication of the
photo essay book In Our Village: Kambi ya Simba Through the Eyes of Its Youth, WKCD's Barbara Cervone teamed up with international service learning consultant Cathryn B. Kaye to invite young people across the globe to
document daily life in the places they call home.