The Daily Gazette, 2/27/05 -Photographs by Iraqi
Civilians, 2004
Photos
in exhibit show Iraqi children, friends
Display at Union College offers intimate slice of everyday life
By KATY MOELLER Gazette Reporter
The exhibit, which
is in the college's Arts Atrium Gallery in the Arts Building, is free
and open to the public. |
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That's not to say
politics and war are entirely absent or hidden in the photographs. For
example, there is a photo of a man walking by a banner, which in Arabic
reads: "Yes, yes to Islam, Yes to peace, No to terrorism, No to
the occupation." VIEW ON FLAGS Another image shows
an Iraqi flag painted on a wall. The caption for the photo reads: "The
Iraqi people refuse the new flag and insist on the
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ANA ZANGRONIZ/GAZETTE PHOTOGRAPHER Student viewing the exhibition Photographs by Iraqi Civilians, 2004 at Union College's Arts Atrium Gallery.
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It received good reviews last September in The New Yorker magazine and the Los Angeles Times. Ritchin was interviewed about the exhibit by Aaron Brown on CNN. "People in Portugal and Argentina saw the broadcast, as well as in the U.S.," Ritchin said in a phone interview last week from New York City. "Part of the point is, you can do projects like this with very limited budget and if it's well conceived and executed, it can impact the world's sense of what's going on." Photography students who viewed the images last week at Union College compared and contrasted them with the press images they've seen from Iraq. They noted the absence of sensational images of tanks, soldiers and, with the exception of one photo, things being blown up. "It's
not about active combat," said Cooper Braun-Enos, a junior from Boulder,
Colo. "There are no American soldiers or Iraqi soldiers. You don't
see adults with guns. There's no active form of warfare. It's the The perspective of the photographs in this exhibit is different from what you'd typically see in the newspaper or on TV, said Walter Yund, a 19-year-old freshman from the Saratoga County village of Galway. 'MORE
TRUTHFUL'
"It's not from the outside looking in," Yund said. "These
pictures show they are much more like us than we may think. I think this
more truthful than regular photojournalism."
About a dozen of the 30 photos in the exhibit were by one man, Jassim
Mohammed Al Khafajy. He is described as a 31-year-old medical
"I wish the Americans [at home] could see what they do here in Iraq,"
Al Khafajy is quoted in the exhibit. "The situation in Iraq is now
very bad because we are like Palestine and Israel." Braun-Enos was
hesitant to draw too many conclusions about the Iraqi people from just
30 photos by 10 individuals. He said the exhibit raises Ritchin said photography projects of this kind have been done before in other countries and contexts, always with the goal of getting an inside and unfiltered look at things. "They've been doing it in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict," he said. "It's been done a lot with children, orphans in Rwanda. We put up a Web site of their work. . . . children in India, children of sex workers. This has been done with children quite a bit." And there may be more of these kinds of photography projects in the future. Kantrowitz, who studied abroad in Tazmania for one term, would love to go back and distribute cameras. "It's an interesting way to learn about a culture," she said. Students from a photography class at Union College look at images of the everyday life of Iraqi civilians in an exhibit in the Arts Atrium Gallery. The photos, including these three of gravediggers, children at school recess, and a family who named their baby daughter America, were all taken with disposable cameras by Iraqi citizens. This article originally appered in the The Daily Gazette on 2/27/05 -By KATY MOELLER Gazette Reporter - Photographs by ANA ZANGRONIZ/GAZETTE PHOTOGRAPHER |