Thursday, August 5, 2010

Photo Forum Beirut is on Holiday



Photo Forum Beirut will be on holiday during the summer. We will be back in October!

Please email photoforumbeirut[at]gmail[dot]com with the subject header 'mailing list' if you wish to be informed about our next sessions. Or join our Facebook page: http://bit.ly/asSW6c

Meanwhile we are thrilled to announce our partnership with Photo-Festivals for the 4th Crossing Point Residency at Visa pour l'Image 2010.


© Dalia Khamissy from the series 'Missing'


Lebanese photographer and Photo Forum Beirut collaborator Dalia Khamissy has been selected by Photo-Festivals
to participate in the Crossing Point Residency at Visa pour l'Image 2010.
The Crossing Point residency gives the photographer the opportunity to travel and participate in a photography festival in Europe for the first time in his/her career. It is des
igned to enable the photographer to network with other like-minded international photographers and practitioners and make the most of the festival.

Born in Beirut, Dalia Khamissy graduated in Photography from the Universite Saint-Esprit Kaslik (Lebanon).

Her work revolves around social and political stories in the Middle-East region. Her photography explores the notions of refugees, borders, legal documents and the power they have in changing people’s lives. She has also been documenting the aftermath of the several wars she has witnessed while growing up in Lebanon.

In 2005 Khamissy worked as a picture editor for the Associated Press in Beirut and quit after the Israeli offensive on Lebanon in 2006.

Since then she has been a full-time photographer documenting the aftermath of Lebanon’s wars, her country’s contemporary and social issues, in particular those concerning women rights. She is presently based in Beirut, Lebanon.

Khamissy’s work has been published in Aperture Magazine, Eyemazing, Bite Magazine (previously known as The Black Snapper), Monocle, Financial Times, Le Monde, Wall Street Journal, MERIP, Le Nouvel Observateur, IRIN, Nox, Skin, Zawaya and Transit Beirut amongst others… Her images were also published in several catalogues for the UNEP, UNHCR, Italian Cooperation, Aleppo’s Photo Festival and Regards des Photographes Arabes Contemporains by the Institut du Monde Arabe amongst others.


In partnership with:

PHOTO FORUM BEIRUT

Media Partners:

British Journal of Photography

Greater Middle East Photography blog



Thursday, July 1, 2010

Open Forum #2

Zico House, Photo-Festivals and Photo Forum Beirut are thrilled to announce Open Forum #2 on Monday 5th July with guest-photographers Jared Moossy and Nadim Bou Habib

Open Forum is a spontaneous evening events hosting talks by photography practitioners and projections of photography artworks.


© Jared Moossy, from the series "La Frontera"


Open Forum #2 , we have invited American photographer Jared Moossy to talk about his photography essays in Afghanistan and Mexico, and he will introduce Razón, the photo collective he is a member.
We are very proud to have Nadim Bou Habib (Photo Forum Beirut #1's selected photographer) who just came back from Turkey after taking part in this year Foundry Photojournalism Workshop. Nadim will tell his experience and will show some of the work produced during the workshop.

The event will take place at Zico House on Sunday 5th July at 7pm.


*** About Jared Moossy

Jared Moossy is a Texan born documentary photographer based in Dallas, Texas. He is represented by Redux Pictures in New York City and is a member of Razón Collective. Jared graduated from Parsons School of Design in New York City in May 2008. His interest in photography goes hand in hand with his interest in current events and social issues. His professional career has mostly been focused on changing country of Afghanistan and the heightened tension of Mexico’s Internal war on Drugs.
Jared attended the Eddie Admas Workshop in 2008 and won the PDN Photo Annual and Marty Forcher fellowship fund in 2008. Jared was also awarded a place in PDN 30's emerging photographers in 2009. He has worked with and been published in Newsweek, Time, The Wall Street Journal, Stern, Magazine, Conde Nast Traveler, Die Ziet among others.



*** About Nadim Bou Habib

© Nadim Bou Habib

Nadim Bou Habib is a Lebanese photographer based in Beirut, where he owns his own studio and works as a freelance photographer. He is mostly interesting in documentary photography. Ever since he was a child, he was fascinated by photography, led by his curiosity and sense of adventure. In 2007, he receives his BA in Photography from the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik in Lebanon for the project he did about a forgotten railway, built a century ago by the Ottomans, traveling between Syria, Jordan, Turkey and Iran, in a way to reveal its secrets..
His photographs have been published in different international magazines like Soura Magazine, Asian Geographic Passport and Alef Magazine and have been exhibited in the Byblos International Festival and USEK in Lebanon as well as the Aleppo International Photo Gathering in Syria
Nadim recently attended the Foundry Photojournalism Workshop in Istanbul where he was tutored by Ron Haviv. For his work there, he got the award of the most consistent and stubborn photographer.








Thursday, May 13, 2010

Selected Photographers #3

Photo Forum Beirut is thrilled to announce names of selected photographers for the second session, which theme is: RELATIONSHIP

Second session's selectors Yumi Goto is pleased she had the opportunity to see the submitted works and discover new photographers. The selection for this session was limited to three. We wish the others every success with future submissions to the Photo Forum Beirut and invite them to join us on Tuesday.

We are pleased to introduce the three selected photographers who will present their work on Tuesday 18th May at 7pm at Zico House.


** Roubaye Korab

© Roubaye Korab

Roubaye will show a series of portraits she did on Old Maids in Lebanon

My mum's aunt was an old maid. She died 2 years ago. After her death, I was wondering why she never got married. Will I be like her one day? Many questions came to my mind about the way an old maid lives, her psychological state, her position in the society, and what does marriage mean to her. Society looks at these old maids with pity as if they spoiled their lives. I decided to enter their world; I photographed these old ladies who crossed the 60 years of age wearing like a Bride: A moment they've never lived.

Roubaye Korab is an independent photographer born in 1987. In 2009, she receives her BA in Photography from the Universite Saint Esprit Kaslik. She has participated in the IHPE07 (International Heritage Photographic Experience 07.) She is currently based in Beirut, working on different commissions as well as her personal projects.


** Bryan Denton

© Bryan Denton

Bryan will show a series of Black and White Photographs about Hezbollah's Mahdi Scouts

This work is part of an ongoing project about Hezbollah's Mahdi Scouts. For me, as a Beirut-based photographer working primarily for The New York Times, and other international media, this project has been a window for me into Hezbollah's relationship with many of the youth in the Lebanese Shia community in the South—many of whom represent the organizations next generation.

Bryan Denton is a freelance photojournalist based in Beirut, Lebanon. He began his career covering news, conflict and social issues after graduating from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, focusing on photography and Middle Eastern and Islamic studies. Bryan has been a contributing photographer with the New York Times since 2005, and his work has also been featured on the pages of TIME, Newsweek, GQ, The Wall Street Journal, The Times of London, Der Spiegel, The National, Courrier International, The Globe and Mail, and The New Republic and he has recently completed assignments in Afghanistan, Lebanon, Georgia, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Iraq and Haiti.

More about Bryan's work on: Bryan Denton


** Odette Makhlouf

@ Odette Makhlouf

Odette will show photographs of her cousin's wedding in Syria

Few months ago I got a phone call, my cousin was getting married. Three days later I was in a taxi on my way to Homs Syria. My mother is Syrian, all her relatives are still there, yet the last time I‘ve been there was ten years ago. I always had mixed feeling towards this country: In a way I couldn’t get over the Lebanese war period and the Syrian interventions, yet a string kept me attached to this land that stayed authentic, and kept its soul. Through the marriage ceremony I felt an urge to document the complexity of relationships: the show, the emotions, traditions and religion.

Lebanese Odette Makhlouf holds a diploma in cinema studies from the Universite Saint Esprit – Kaslik and a master’s degree in cinema and audio-visual studies from Paris 8 – France. Since then she has been working on different feature films and TV commercials.







Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Photo Forum Beirut launch Open Forum #1

Zico House, Photo-Festivals and Photo Forum Beirut are thrilled to launch the first Open Forum with photographer Eugenie Dolberg on Sunday 16th May

Open Forum will be a spontaneous evening events hosting talks by photography practitioners and projection of photography artworks.

To launch our first
Open Forum, we have invited photographer Eugenie Dolberg and filmmaker Maysoon Pachachi to talk about the photography project Open Shutters Iraq and read from the eponymous photo book published in March by Trolley Books.
The talk will take place at
Zico House on Sunday 16th May at 7pm.


Photographs from Open Shutters Iraq project will also be exhibited at UMAM from 14th May, 6pm.
Filmmaker Maysoon Pachachi who followed the project, created a 102-minute documentary which will be screened at Metropolis Art Cinema on Monday 17th May, 8pm.


*** About Eugenie Dolberg and Maysoon Pachachi

Eugenie Dolberg is a photographer who developed Open Shutters to teach photography not only as a medium of documentation, but as a way to share ideas and emotional experiences. She lives between London and Tehran.


Maysoon Pachachi
is an
Iraqi filmmaker, editor for television documentaries and dramas and documentaries director. She has time teaching film and video directing and editing in Jerusalem and Gaza for the Jerusalem Film Institute and Med Media, a program of the European Union and at Birzeit University in Ramallah. Pachachi currently lives in Britain, and plans to create a school and a film festival in Baghdad.


*** About Open Shutters Iraq photography project



"I open my eyes in the morning…I see the gun by my bed I toss and turn and then close my eyes so I don’t see the gun…and I go to sleep at night. My husband and I go to sleep “decent” these days. We worry that someone will attack us, the distance between me and my husband has started to grow, we no longer talk before we sleep, nor do we laugh together in the morning…there is no space for anything but anxiety."
©
Lu'lu'a, Kirkuk /Index On Censorship/Open Shutters

The Open Shutters Iraq photography project began in 2006 when photojournalist Eugenie Dolberg gathered a group of Iraqi women in Damascus for a month to teach them how to take photographs. The 12 women shared their life stories, talking about their joys and opening up about surviving wars, death threats and kidnappings. They later returned to Iraq, where they used their newfound strength in photography to capture their stories.


*** About Open Shutters Iraq photography book



Open Shutters Iraq is a book of nine photographic essays and writing by women from all over Iraq. The thread of contemporary Iraqi history emerges through their tales of war, sanctions, intifada, siege, kidnapping, grief, love, happiness, times of resistance, achievements and small triumphs.

Dolberg, frustrated by the lack of journalistic access in Iraq and subsequent coverage of the war, decided to find a way for Iraqi women to tell their story in their own voices, the human reality of war, behind the collective headlines.
As Irada Zaydan, the Iraqi Project Manager who quit her job as a professor at the University of Baghdad to work on this project, and risked her life on several occasions says, 'This is not a project, this is a dream. A dream I want to live for my daughter. So she can grow up and understand what is truly happening now.'

Trolley Books is a leading independent publisher committed to issues germane to contemporary society in art, photography and reportage.
In the nine years since its inception in 2001 Trolley has established itself as an innovative and exciting imprint recognised for its diverse and often daring range of photography and art books, its high quality of production and design, and most of all for its commitment to the integrity of its publications.
Recognition has come in part from the numerous prestigious awards it has received, from such institutions as the Infinity Award of the ICP in New York, Rencontres D’Arles, Pictures of the Year International, the American Photography Awards, PDN and Photo Eye, and also from a more than positive reception by the domestic and international media. Trolley also received a commendation for its services to photography book publishing at
the 2004 Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards.






Sunday, March 28, 2010

Photo Forum Beirut #3: Call for submission - EXTENDED DEADLINE - MAY 10



Zico House and Photo-Festivals invite you to the third session of Photo Forum Beirut on Tuesday 18th May 2010


**Format of the sessions


Selected photographers will have a chance to experience speaking about their work in public, to articulate concerns, aims and plans for their photography and to ask opinions in an open environment.
We strongly encourage feedback from the attending audience.

The third session will take place at Zico House on 18th May 2010 from 19.00 to 21.00.

For each session we will invite an international external selector to choose the photographers who will present and discuss their work.

We are proud to announce Photo Forum Beirut #3's international selector: Yumi Goto



© Jean Chung

Yumi Goto is an art and photo documentary project coordinator and curator.
Her work has focused on the development of cultural exchanges that transcend borders through collaboration with local artists and NGOs in areas affected by conflict.
She launched and serves as editor-in-chief of pdfX12 | photo documentary folioX12, a free photographic portfolio digitally distributed since 2007. Goto also has worked as a photo editor for the 100th memorial photographic book project, This Day of Change by the Japanese publisher Kodansha in 2008-2009. In 2010, She launched a weekly photography blog “I was there”.



Past international selectors:
PFB #1: Yasmina Reggad, UK-based independent curator, founder and director of Photo-Festival.
PFB #2: Cia de Foto, Sao Paulo-based photo collective.


** Talk

Every month, Photo Forum Beirut invites a local or visiting host to speak about a specific issue related to photography practice.

Third session's speaker will be announced shortly.


** Submission process

Theme: RELATIONSHIP

Deadline: 10TH MAY 2010

The session will benefit photographers who do not have access to regular feedback and are willing to receive specialist and peer-led critique of their work.
Please note that the session is NOT for exhibiting printed pictures; selected photographers will show their work or series related to this month theme in either slide or digital projection.

TO APPLY for Photo Forum Beirut #3, please make sure you will be in Beirut on Tuesday 18th May 2010.
Please follow our guidelines:

- create a Photoshelter Starter free account: (and do not forget to choose STARTER at the bottom of the box of Pick a Plan)

- upload your photographs (up to 20 images of 1024 pixels on the longest side, and a file size NO larger than 500 kb);

- share your gallery with photoforumbeirut@gmail (not familiar with Photoshelter? Follow the 3 first “Getting started” steps);

- name your gallery with your Name and Surname;

- email us a short biography, a presentation text or artist statement about your work.


Sunday, March 14, 2010

Selected Photographers #2

Photo Forum Beirut is thrilled to announce names of selected photographers for the second session, which theme is: The CITY


The second session's selectors Cia de Foto are pleased they had the opportunity to see the submitted works and discover new photographers. The selection for this session was limited to three. We wish the others every success with future submissions to the Photo Forum Beirut and invite them to join us on Tuesday.

The session's talk changed at the last minute and we had the honour to introduce French photographer Samuel Le Coeur who explained about the Association Point Rouge and its role in the hanging of art works during cultural and artistic exhibitions and events. Le Coeur had started his work in hanging images at exhibitions with the Maison Europeenne de la Photographie in Paris.

We are pleased to introduce the three selected photographers who will present their work on Tuesday 16th March at 7pm at Zico House.


** Fernando Borges

© Fernando Borges

Fernando will show a series of pictures he did on Night Workers

Fernando’s work is an ongoing project shot at night around Beirut. A group of young photography enthusiasts go around the city every Tuesday night, from 9 till 12PM. The group started for fun on Facebook and ended expanding to become a collective of around 20 active members working on a project about night workers. Together they formed the “Night Collective”

Fernando Borges is a Brazilian photographer currently based in Lebanon

More about Fernando's work on: Flying Kebab and the Night Collective


** Elias Moubarak

© Elias Moubarak

Elias will show a series of Black and White images

After trying different styles in photography, I have found that the pictures that matter to me the most are the ones with something happening in them, a story behind them, interesting characters, something true and with emotions to share. I consider photography a very instinctive form of art. It is only later sometimes that I understand the choices I make when I choose my subjects and frame my pictures. I truly believe that pictures should speak for themselves and suggest different interpretations and reactions.

Elias Moubarak was born in 1985; since he was a little child he has been fascinated by moving images and pictures.
He studied Communication Arts at the Lebanese American University at Byblos. Since his graduation, he has a documentary project that he is working on. He took photography seriously a year ago when he bought his first DSLR camera. Elias likes to experiment even though he finds himself mostly among people and the stories they could share. Elias had an exhibition called Rust Never Sleeps at the Centre Culturel of Jbeil. He's interested in pursuing his studies and master in photography or photojournalism.

More about Elias' work on: Le Coeur a Droite


** Matias Nordahl Carlsen

© Nordahl Carlsen

Matias will show a selection of photographs from his series "Occupied"

Morocco annexed most of Western Sahara in 1975, when the Spanish occupiers retreated during Franco`s last years. Today Western Sahara is the biggest country, both in size and population on the UN list of Non-Self-Governing Territories. Their government, The Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, are located in the refugee camps on the Algerian side of a more than 2500 km long Moroccan built wall. And the Saharawi population, still living in the occupied territories, are now outnumbered by the Moroccan settlers and suffer from discrimination and lack of freedom of speech. Human rights activists has been jailed and tortured with no trails. Youngsters are frequently beaten up and arrested after demonstrations. Journalists and photographers have been refused entry or kicked out after arrival.

Hiding my camera under my jacket I went to find out how the Saharawis are coping with the situation and how they live their lives. I spent a month in the occupied territories and often stayed in the houses of people who where to become my Friends.
The pictures I want to present is the result of my research trip to Western Sahara. I also want to present quotations from the people i meet in the captions.

I want to continue the project with photographing the refugee camps in Algeria and the the Polisarios armed forces in Mauritania.

Photojournalist and documentary filmmaker Matias Nordahl Carlsen, born in 1981, has been working on documenting social issues around the world for the past 5 years. For his films he has won the Norwegian Documentary Film Festival three times. He started out as a photographer in 2007, when he was working in a Nepali Television program in Kathmandu. Since then he has been documenting Burmese refugee camps in Bangladesh, untouchable women's struggle in Nepal, the deforestation in Peru, the Norwegian army's factories in China, amongst other things.





Wednesday, March 3, 2010

REMINDER - Photo Forum Beirut #2: Call for submission



Zico House and Photo-Festivals invite you to the second session of Photo Forum Beirut on Tuesday 16th March 2010


**Format of the sessions


Selected photographers will have a chance to experience speaking about their work in public, to articulate concerns, aims and plans for their photography and to ask opinions in an open environment.
We strongly encourage feedback from the attending audience.

The second session will take place at Zico House on 16th March 2010 from 19.00 to 21.00.

For each session we will invite an international external selector to choose the photographers who will present and discuss their work.
The second session's selector is the Brazilian photo collective Cia de Foto.


** Talk


Every month, Photo Forum Beirut invites a local or visiting host to speak about a specific issue related to photography practice.

For our second session, Ibrahim Suleiman from Paladium will open the session and talk about his work as a printer.

Ibrahim Suleiman is a technical printer based in Beirut. He is the owner of Paladium, one of Lebanon's leading photographic printing and finishing centres he established in 1998 in Hamra. Suleiman is behind the printing and finishing of most of the photo exhibitions in Lebanon.


** Submission process

Theme: THE CITY

Deadline EXTENDED: from 1st February to 10th March 2010

The session will benefit photographers who do not have access to regular feedback and are willing to receive specialist and peer-led critique of their work.
Please note that the session is NOT for exhibiting printed pictures; selected photographers will show their work or series related to this month theme in either slide or digital projection.

TO APPLY for the second session of Photo Forum Beirut, please make sure you are in Beirut on Tuesday 16th March 2010. Please follow the following steps:

- create a Photoshelter Starter free account: (and do not forget to choose STARTER at the bottom of the box of Pick a Plan)

- upload your photographs (up to 20 images of 1024 pixels on the longest side, and a file size NO larger than 500 kb);

- share your gallery with photoforumbeirut@gmail (not familiar with Photoshelter? Follow the 3 first “Getting started” steps);

- name your gallery with your Name and Surname;

- email us a short biography, a presentation text or artist statement about your work.