Mentioned in an earlier post, Delhi Photo Festival is gearing itself up, and is now at the stage of inviting submissions. Further stages are being worked on as I write this, and include an enticing array of workshops, lectures, portfolio reviews, gallery walks and seminars.
Through Nazar Foundation, the festival is the brainchild of Prashant Panjiar and Dinesh Khanna, both well known photographers, and for mentoring young photographers and propagating photography.
I know I have many readers from India and elsewhere who will be interested in participating in such a venue, and I encourage them to review the submission requirements and send in their work.
I am excited to have been invited to the festival, and I'm scheduled to lead a 3-4 hour workshop on Multimedia For Photographers.
pontifications .. sometimes acerbic, sometimes not .. but always opinionated on travel, editorial and dokumentary photography
Showing posts with label Photo Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photo Events. Show all posts
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Friday, June 10, 2011
Delhi Photo Festival: Nazar Foundation
The Nazar Foundation, in partnership with the India Habitat Centre, is organizing the Delhi Photo Festival on 15 to 28 October 2011.
The Delhi Photo Festival is a non-commercial venture, and entry will be free to ensure popular and wide-reaching participation. Through Nazar Foundation, the festival is the brainchild of Prashant Panjiar and Dinesh Khanna, both well known photographers, and for mentoring young photographers and propagating photography. Nazar Foundation was launched with the aim of institutionalizing what these two photographers are already been doing so on an informal basis.
The core attraction of the festival will be exhibitions of photography from India, Asia and other international work.
This promises to be quite an event, and will include workshops and seminars. I am excited to have been asked to teach an Introduction to Multimedia class on the afternoon-evening of October 15.
More details will be available in due course, and a schedule for submissions and the process will be announced soon.
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Joseph F. C. Rock: Western China
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| Photo © Joseph Francis Charles Rock |
His travels in Western China is featured by On Shadow, and I thought I'd show the gallery of his more than 275 photographs made in the 1920s. It's always fascinating to me to view photographs made during these early years of photography, which required lugging heavy cameras and large amounts of developing chemicals. What we present-day photographers carry is a mere trifle of what these photographers had to schlep. They certainly had porters to do it for them, but imagine the difficulties this still was, as well as having to develop the films in situ.
For those of you who are patient and interested enough to scroll through the 275 images, you'll notice one that is captioned as "Lamas with trumpets, drums, and cymbals chanting the prelude to the Black Hat Dance in front of the main chanting hall at Cho-ni Lamasery" and was taken in December 1925. Compare it with contemporary photographs of Bhutan's Black Hat dances at its tsechus, and you'll realize that not much has changed.
On Shadow is primarily run by Nicholas Calcott, and was founded in January 2008, originally as the blog arm of the publisher 12th Press. It presents projects and essays from invited scholars and artists.
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Pop Photo's 25 Best Places To Photograph

Popular Photo Magazine has published a feature titled 25 Best Places To Photograph after running a poll amongst various documentary and travel photographers who are drawn to cultures far-removed from ours both geographically and chronologically.
The photographers are, amongst others, Chris Rainier recommending New Guinea, Carolyn Drake recommending Xinjiang, and Andrea Pistolesi recommending Sicily.
Jaipur was recommended as one of the best places to photograph but in my view, that city pales in comparison to a hundred of other more picturesque places in India.
I could have easily straighten that out had I been asked.
And what about Nepal, Bhutan, Bali, Vietnam, Ethiopia....?
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