dinsdag 1 september 2009

Hashem El Madani : Studio Practices Photography


Hashem El Madani: Studio Practices

Mind the Gap/Arab Image FoundationEdited by Lisa Le Feuvre and Akram Zaatari. Essay by Stephen Wright. Winner of the The John Kobal Book Award 2005.

Long stored in files or dumped in dusty basements, the spontaneous, seemingly ephemeral portraits taken by working studio photographers have been getting a second look over the past 20 years. Such rediscovered work revealed modern American masters of the vernacular in figures like Mike Disfarmer and E.J. Bellocq. Now the photographs of Lebanese photographer Hashem El Madani are set to be discovered. Over a career of more than 50 years (and counting) of work in Saida, Lebanon, El Madani has documented a people who have suffered great social upheaval but who, when posing for his camera, felt free and safe to be who they wanted. The subjects of his photographs exude dignity, strength, good humor and individuality. The conventions of studio photography remain static, but over time, the parade of faces who passed in front of El Madani's lens would change with the times, forming a shifting collective portrait of a Middle Eastern town in the last half of the twentieth century. “I would have liked to have photographed all the people of Saida,” he said, “because that is where I live.” See for Review: Hashem Ek Madani: Studio Practices ... & see for Hashem El Madani Itinerary, by Akram Zaatari ...

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