Guannan Li - Glimpses of China

Thursday Spotlight: About ‘China Glimpses’ – words by Guannan Li:

China Glimpses is a collection of street-photographs taken in and around China from 2017 – 2019. Most of the places are quite personal ones that I’ve revisited many times, others I came across in passing. The paper horse, for example, is from a shop specializing in tomb supplies and it's very close to where my grandparents are buried. The man with the glasses and plastic bags – I call him “Mr. Cats” because he brings fresh drinking water and food for stray cats to a nearby campus twice a week. He tells me he has been doing this for over a decade. Then there are images that just "feel" very Chinese to me – like that half-hidden Mahjong garage – venues like that are now forbidden, but continue to exist, often hiding in plain sight – on that particular day, it was simply too hot to keep the gate closed. To me, these images represent a China that is dreamy, deeply human and fleetingly surreal at times.

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Daria Nazarova - The Time of Water

Photographer Daria Nazarova’s familial history is deeply connected to Mologa, a once inhabited land, now submerged beneath the Rybinsk reservoir. Between 1937 and 1941, more than 130,000 people were forcibly displaced to make way for a hydroelectric dam.

Older houses were burned, stone houses were destroyed, while the rest were dismantled and transported to new locations. Those who were able, moved to nearby places often close to the seashore. However, many residents couldn't afford to move their homes and either sold them at cheap prices or became homeless. Unable to survive the shocks of illness, poverty and harsh environments, many previous residents died as a result. In total, an estimated 700 villages were flooded; while more than 50 churches, 3 monasteries, noble estates with surrounding territories, gardens, parks, and the estate of Musin-Pushkin were destroyed and drowned at the order of a hand.

Daria found herself drawn to these places in search of stories to locate her past. Indifference, she notes, “is impossible now, as it is impossible to change the past.” Articles were not enough; Daria searched restlessly for live witnesses, those who kept the stories of their relatives, “I needed photos, documents, letters, evidence.” However, for some time there had been a ban on speaking of Mologa leaving former residents too afraid to share information. Despite the more recent opportunities to recount Mologa’s history, many people have remained in silent acceptance. With a camera in hand, Daria chases the inevitability that soon, there will be no one left to remember Mologa. 

- Alexa Fahlman

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Daria's website

Daniel Bracken - It’s Safe Behind the Glass

It’s Safe Behind the Glass is a working title, taken from an enclosure sign at the London Zoo. Forming an illustration of time loss, the photographs conceptualise a gap between the perceived and physical – brushing against fleeting moments within the domestic and the natural worlds. The images string together a narrative that alters our perceptions on looking. Much like spectres of memory, they slip into and out of sequence, showing an affected familiar moment; a nod towards the Uncanny. The photographs become timeless and frozen. Drawn from personal dreams and memories: archives, manuscripts, and novels become the main inspirations for delineating images. Referencing Virginia Woolf’s narrative techniques, the photographs drift past autobiography - out of their timelines, out of their environments; and become familiar moments that have been forever changed. It is these gaps where the body finds its weightlessness. Abysses of anonymity, of time loss. A shift out of space – out of time. The images further contrast meticulous human intervention through evidence of craft and labour. The natural world becomes changed, almost forced to stop. Time that has been lost, trapped in the instant, but mostly forgotten in these spaces. Abandoned. The defiled grave, the decrepit rituals. Research into Victor Turner’s Liminal and Liminoid become important: these ritualistic moments between “being” and “becoming”. Perhaps this is where the photographs sit: as the Double within nature, a mirror to time. The viewer is forced to look between the perceived and the photographic.

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Daniel's website

Elliot Cole - A Hull to Hold The Waves At Bay

A Hull To Hold The Waves At Bay considers the subject of mental health and how we manage it. It is a journey of self-exploration that contemplates our interaction with our surroundings and how we reduce the impact of our symptoms. Inevitably my own experiences are intertwined amongst the stories of the subjects. The time spent making the photographs allows for conversation and informs a more collaborative approach. The series presents a culmination of the momentary calm, the warmth and the fleeting clarity afforded by these coping strategies juxtaposed with the difficulties and frustrations encountered along the way.

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Elliot's website

Ana Vieira de Castro - Memories in Lost Time and Space

Memories Lost in Time and Space clutches onto the liminal, changing moments in our lives. It is about feelings of anxiousness, uncertain expectations, and the difficulty of finding your sense of self when lost in love; the process of forgetting strong memories and feelings as you find new ones, meeting your new self and letting your worn identities go; and the transition periods that lead our lives towards what awaits. 

For photographer Ana Vieira de Castro, this project started as a search for the meaning of true love, and represents her process of falling in love. Last year was a turning point in her life, to which she sought to document her memories through photography and mix them with letters and postcards found in antique stores. A compilation of letters from lover to lover– heartbreak, marriage, being in love and not being together– present the range of emotions felt when falling in and out of love. Through the process, Ana found that somehow, the memories that once belonged to someone are now enmeshed with hers, representing her past self, and what she was once searching for. 

- Alexa Fahlman


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Porto, 9th of September of 1964  João Marcos:Sorry if I am bothering you again, but I would like to say the thoughts I still carry. At all times I find myself revisiting the latest events and I always end up not coming to a conclusion. Meanwhile, it…

Porto, 9th of September of 1964

João Marcos:

Sorry if I am bothering you again, but I would like to say the thoughts I still carry. At all times I find myself revisiting the latest events and I always end up not coming to a conclusion. Meanwhile, it seems to me, I am sorry and please don’t wish me bad, you did not behave perfectly. You told me in your letter that you took the misunderstanding between us as a result of my youth.

João Marcos, you know, that although I’m already 22 years old, my life has been very simple. Maybe that’s why my head cherishes so many dreams. Don’t think I’m trying to change your mind, but since we broke up I would like to be as honest as possibl…

João Marcos, you know, that although I’m already 22 years old, my life has been very simple. Maybe that’s why my head cherishes so many dreams. Don’t think I’m trying to change your mind, but since we broke up I would like to be as honest as possible with you. I was hoping João Marcos, that you would understand the illusions, ideas, aspirations and faith in life that I carry. Although you tried to destroy something in me, I will do everything for that not to happen. I believe that God will help me walk the path of life with the same hope and idealizations that I had and that until now, have been part of myself.

I hoped that you had understood all of this, that being silent does not always mean that I have nothing to say, but there is so much to say that sometimes you end up being afraid of doing so.

Sometimes you want to say yes, but you end up saying no.

You that have a sister, that you care for so much , must understand. It was with you that I got in touch with love for the first time, and for that, like everyone that starts something, I failed.   I failed so many times and for that I’m sorry.   I …

You that have a sister, that you care for so much , must understand. It was with you that I got in touch with love for the first time, and for that, like everyone that starts something, I failed.

I failed so many times and for that I’m sorry.

I only ask for you to always remember of

Cidália

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May, 19-05-78   Dear Isaurita,   After our phone call I got immensely sad for two reasons, 1st, my son only brings me sadness and sorrows and 2nd, the fact that you can’t come over. Our best years go by as we drift apart. I want you and you are not …

May, 19-05-78

Dear Isaurita,

After our phone call I got immensely sad for two reasons, 1st, my son only brings me sadness and sorrows and 2nd, the fact that you can’t come over. Our best years go by as we drift apart. I want you and you are not near.

Kisses from Berto

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Dear Isaurita,  How are you? I’m doing fine. A week has gone by and I am closer to being with you, whom I miss so much. It is only unfortunate that you can’t come meet me. Think about it.Kisses from Berto

Dear Isaurita,

How are you? I’m doing fine. A week has gone by and I am closer to being with you, whom I miss so much. It is only unfortunate that you can’t come meet me. Think about it.

Kisses from Berto

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2/07/1967  Dear Tereza,  When I get there I want to spend an afternoon with you. We have much to talk about. I loved having you here, we really enjoyed ourselves. Kisses to Terezinha.Big hug and kissesLuis

2/07/1967

Dear Tereza,

When I get there I want to spend an afternoon with you. We have much to talk about. I loved having you here, we really enjoyed ourselves. Kisses to Terezinha.

Big hug and kisses

Luis

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Alexandre Desane - Crépus

Born in France to parents of Haitian descent, photographer Alexandre Desane remarks how natural hair has always been a significant marker of identity and part of his everyday life. His series Crépus, which began in 2019, is an on-going photographic celebration of natural Black hair in France. While working on a global project on racism, Alexandre was continuously confronted with the systemic issue of hair discrimination, “I kept hearing about Black people getting fired because of their hair, and this really became the starting point of this photo series–I needed to celebrate Black hair.” Shot exclusively outdoors and on black and white film, Alexandre’s photographs reject the calculated environment of studio space and lighting; instead, offering pared down, candid glimpses of Black hair. These compositional choices reinforce the core message of his series–the importance of seeing and celebrating the natural beauty and charisma of Black hair in our everyday lives.

-Alexa Fahlman

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Alexandre's website

Noé Vercaemst - Pause

Time is suspended, the world no longer turns, but our absence leaves traces. These forgotten landscapes, sometimes destroyed, are erased from our memories, emptied of colour and life. The grass grows, the asphalt fades and cracks in the wind's breath and the sun's rays.

Noé on IG

Carmen Colombo - Mondo Piccolo

“Mondo Piccolo” is an ongoing personal project that tells about places and situations in the suburbs of Northern Italy, where I was born and I grew up. It’s a research about the meaning of “familiar” with two different connotations. From one side, it refers to my personal background and to the feeling of belonging to something. On the other hand, it concerns people’s usual everyday life habits. I am portraying the micro-realities of a suburban area that is for me calm and reassuring. I am interested in portraying a way of living in these small suburban villages, far away from big cities. Here, typical corners are hidden, still not standardized. My images are quiet moments, in which I slow down and I try to make mine the subject I portray, either a person or an object. Often it’s the light only that creates the right conditions for the perfect image, a non-place where nothing happens.

Carmen on IG

Axel Serrat - Stills

I’m from Barcelona, Spain. I’m mixed, my dad was Catalan and my mum’s from Benin, a little country in Africa. My work is a clear expression of my self and how I see life according to the values my ancestors gave me. I think my photography relates to our strong, natural component and our capacity to try to get away from nature–that eternal fight we all have inside. I explore how getting closer to nature makes us better humans, and makes us understand humanity from another point of view.

Axel on IG

Men-tal Health (2020)

Men-tal Health by Louis Bever is an ongoing series that encourages men to be open about their emotions and to be honest about how they feel with their friends and loved ones. Each portrait is shot in the home or a comfortable space where they feel they can be their most vulnerable. The stories which accompany Louis’ portraits are diverse in nature, yet the same message resonates within each excerpt–men must prioritize and speak out about their mental health. Having these conversations is the first step. We must also work towards destigmatizing mental illness in BIPOC communities, as well as confront the racial disparities within mental health systems around the world. As June 15-21 marks Men’s Mental Health Awareness Week, take this time to reach out to your friends, spread awareness, and most of all–take care of yourself.

Thank you to all the brave men who shared their stories below.

 
Louis' Instagram
Louis' Website

Noemi Comi - Alba lux

Alba lux is an artistic project that combines documentation and conceptual photography. The photographs become real symbolic images, reproducing idyllic atmospheres and ineffable realities. It’s a multidisciplinary journey between spirituality and science, which begins within the earthly reality and then takes off within the otherworldly one.

The central topic of the project concern Near-Death Experiences. NDE is a profound personal experience associated with death or impending death which researchers claim share similar characteristics. In fact, people with very different religious, political and social beliefs, have documented their experiences which share many elements in common: the presence of a strong light, a sense of bliss and changes in personality.

I found the subjects within social networks like Facebook and through personal connections. At first they were quite wary but after clarifying my intentions I was able to meet them. 

Each experience is very different and connoted by different religious aspects. Some have experienced it positively, others were traumatized and suffered from depression. Each story is described by three different photographs: the first two want to represent the subject and his changes, the third is a conceptual interpretation of the experience they lived. The writings inserted are texts in Italian written directly by the subjects about their experiences.

Noemi on IG

Camillo Pasquarelli - Lockdown in Genoa

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On March 9th, the Italian government imposed a lockdown to prevent the spread of Covid-19. Since then, 60 million people have been living under one of the most severe quarantines in Europe.

When Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced the beginning of the so-called “Phase 1” of the lockdown, I found myself stuck in a place I barely knew– the coastal city of Genoa. As time progressed, Genoa became the place I ended up exploring in its pandemic desolation.

The emptiness of the city amplified its celebrated and mysterious past. For centuries, Genoa played a central role in the history of the Mediterranean region. Its port, once a mandatory destination for traders hailing from the East and West, is now facing the consequences of global economic slowdown. This reverberates into the deep identity crisis the whole city has been facing for decades; a crisis and a pandemic. I wondered how I could effectively tell these two stories from the right angle, with an honest and visual representation.

I felt disoriented, caught in the middle of the constant flux of images offered by mass media. To visualize the effects of the virus on our lives is to see the packed hospitals, portraits of doctors and nurses painstakingly fighting the spread of Covid-19, lines and lines of coffins. While locked at home, connecting with the outer world needs mediation, and images play a crucial part in forming our idea of what is going on out there. At first, I was skeptical about portraying a collective experience from an objective and informative approach. But then, while wandering around the narrow alleys of the old town, I realized that in order to find a way to convey this daunting feeling of stillness and suspension, I had to let the emotions take the lead and guide me through my long, lonely walks, and their casual encounters.

An old man enjoys the spring sunshine right outside his home.

An old man enjoys the spring sunshine right outside his home.

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The port of Genoa, one of Italy’s most major seaports, is facing a critical moment due to the collapse of cargo and cruise ships.

The port of Genoa, one of Italy’s most major seaports, is facing a critical moment due to the collapse of cargo and cruise ships.

Luca Bonfiglio, 59. He works at the port and is part of the labourer association–a group helping to deliver food and medication to the elderly or to those unable to leave their homes.

Luca Bonfiglio, 59. He works at the port and is part of the labourer association–a group helping to deliver food and medication to the elderly or to those unable to leave their homes.

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Tiny alleys characterize most of Genoa’s city centre.

Tiny alleys characterize most of Genoa’s city centre.

The city of Genoa has one of Italy’s highest aging population.

The city of Genoa has one of Italy’s highest aging population.

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The famous beach of Boccadasse, an old mariner’s neighbourhood, normally overcrowded in the spring with locals and tourists.

The famous beach of Boccadasse, an old mariner’s neighbourhood, normally overcrowded in the spring with locals and tourists.

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An elderly woman receives her medication delivered to her doorstep by a volunteer.

An elderly woman receives her medication delivered to her doorstep by a volunteer.

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Silvia Calosso, 20; another dedicated volunteer for the labourers association.

Silvia Calosso, 20; another dedicated volunteer for the labourers association.

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“Mangini Cafe”. All the bars, cafes and restaurants are closed.                                The closed entrance of Carlo Felice, the city’s main theatre.

“Mangini Cafe”. All the bars, cafes and restaurants are closed. The closed entrance of Carlo Felice, the city’s main theatre.

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Camillo's website

Nils Davey - Pay With Cigarettes

‘Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.’

Ferris Bueller

Not bad words to live by from the sausage king of Chicago. It’s hard to keep this mantra in mind in today’s world but when I walk the streets of Anytown, USA invariably someone will try and bum a smoke from me. Camera at the ready I state ‘Of course you can have one, but i’ll need to take your photo’. I stop and look around. These photos are the result.

NIEL ON IG
nilsdavey.com