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B&H Photography Podcast

Picturing World Cultures: Kiana Hayeri: Iran / Afghanistan

B&H Photography Podcast

Jill Waterman

Podcast, Photography, Arts, Visual Arts, Bh, Photo

4.62K Ratings

🗓️ 4 January 2024

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Kiana Hayeri was born in Iran, and this was where she launched her career as a photojournalist and visual storyteller. Yet after traveling to Afghanistan for a 2014 assignment, she decided to relocate, spending the next eight years covering both the frontlines of conflict and everyday lives of the Afghan people.

In this second installment of our monthly series, Picturing World Cultures, we speak with Hayeri about her experiences living and working in a region mired in cultural upheaval, failing infrastructure, and rife with political violence.

Listen in as Hayeri shares insights about her early work documenting youth culture in both Iran and Afghanistan, while revealing subtle differences in how each society approaches a division between public and private life.

When it comes to making pictures, Hayeri’s first concern is for the latent potential of her photographs to endanger the lives of her subjects. She elaborates on making conscious calculations in her head related to every small detail to mitigate this risk.

Working as a woman within a patriarchal society involves great challenges, and we broach this subject, as well as the advantages she has when photographing culturally sensitive subjects.

While Hayeri has little problem maintaining focus on the frontlines while immersed in her work, we also discuss the tolls of making pictures in traumatic situations, and the importance of taking breaks to reestablish a sense of normalcy and maintain health and sanity.

Hayeri has worked with an extensive network of local contacts to arrange access for the stories she tells. She avoids using the term “fixer” for these essential collaborators, pointing out, “The credit for a lot of the stories that we work on goes to our local colleagues, because they are the ones who put themselves on the front of everything. It’s their reputation, their lives that they risk. I have a lot of respect for that.”

Check out the first episode of our new podcast series Picturing World Cultures, featuring my interview with Australian photographer Wayne Quilliam, here:
https://www.bhphotovideo.com/explora/podcasts/photography/picturing-world-cultures-wayne-quilliam-australiatasmania

Above photograph © Kiana Hayeri
Guest: Kiana Hayeri

For more information on our guest and the gear she uses, see:
https://www.bhphotovideo.com/explora/podcasts/photography/picturing-world-cultures-kiana-hayeri-iran-afghanistan

Stay Connected:
Kiana Hayeri Website: https://www.kianahayeri.com/
Kiana Hayeri Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kianahayeri/
Kiana Hayeri Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kianahj
Kiana Hayeri Ted Talk: https://www.ted.com/speakers/kiana_hayeri

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You're listening to the B&H Photography Podcast. I'm Jill Waterman, the show's creative

0:07.8

producer. I'm also host of our new monthly series, Picturing World Cultures.

0:17.0

How do you make pictures under conditions that might put the life of your subject at risk?

0:23.8

What methods can you use to protect their identity and still create a compelling and

0:28.4

dignified photograph?

0:31.3

And what's it like to live and work in a country in the midst of cultural upheaval, failing infrastructure, and rife with political violence?

0:39.0

These are just a few of the topics we cover with today's guest, photojournalist and visual storyteller

0:45.6

Keana Harry.

0:47.6

Born in Iran and raised between Tehran and Toronto Canada,

0:55.0

Kiana first picked up a camera to bridge language and culture gaps when adapting to her new environment.

1:05.0

She returned to Iran after college to work as a professional photographer,

1:10.0

moving to Kabul, Afghanistan in 2014.

1:15.0

She spent the next eight years covering both the front lines of conflict and the everyday lives of the Afghan people

1:21.0

as a regular contributor to publications such as the New York Times and National Geographic.

1:27.0

Kiana is a senior Ted Fellow and a National Geographic Explorer grantee.

1:35.0

In 2021, she received the Robert Kappa Gold Medal for her photographic series

1:40.0

where prison is a kind of freedom documenting the lives of Afghan women in Hurat prison.

1:47.0

In 2022, Kiana received the Lika Oscar Barnock Award for her portfolio,

1:53.4

Promises Written on the Ice Left in the Sun,

1:56.6

an intimate look into Afghan lives

1:59.0

from all walks of life.

2:03.4

One editorial note, this episode was recorded last December shortly before Kiana relocated from

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