4.6 • 2K Ratings
🗓️ 1 October 2020
⏱️ 57 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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It is important to be reminded of the power of photography to educate and explore, and to be a vehicle of self-expression, even self-realization. Equally crucial—through process and through memory—photography’s ability to bring people together, to share and to collaborate, is vital. On this week’s episode of the B&H Photography Podcast, we welcome a photographer who has built her life’s work around this idea of education through creative collaboration. For more than forty years, Wendy Ewald has lead documentary “investigations” and collaborative projects that encourage the participants to use cameras to examine their own lives, families, and communities, and to make images of their fantasies and dreams. During these projects, she also photographs—normally with a 4 x 5 camera—and asks her students and subjects to then manipulate her images and negatives, further engaging with the process and adding to the authorship of the final work.
With support of the most prestigious fellowships, from universities, NGOs, even from camera and film manufacturers, Ewald has directed photography programs in South America, India, Africa, Canada, and most notably in Appalachia. In the 1970s, Ewald worked with schools and the Appalshop media center to teach photography to children living in rural Kentucky and in 1985 published the groundbreaking book Portraits and Dreams: Photographs and Stories by Children of the Appalachians. This book has been an inspiration to countless educators and community photographers and this year, Mack Books has published an expanded edition, which includes updates on the lives of several of the original students. Also, Ewald has co-directed a documentary film on the project and the reunion with her former students, which recently aired on the PBS program POV.
Join us as we speak with Ewald about teaching in Kentucky and elsewhere, about the power of collaboration and creative expression, and about reuniting with her former students and the making of her powerful documentary.
Guest: Wendy Ewald
Photograph © Russel Akemon, from the book, "Portraits and Dreams" by Wendy Ewald
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| 0:00.0 | You're listening to the B&H Photography Podcast. |
| 0:04.6 | For over 40 years, B&H has been the professional source for photography, video, audio, and |
| 0:09.5 | more. |
| 0:10.5 | For your favorite gear, news, and reviews, visit us at bnh.com or download the B&H app to |
| 0:16.0 | your iPhone or Android device. |
| 0:18.2 | Now here's your host, Alan White. |
| 0:21.7 | Greetings and welcome to the B&H Photography Podcast. |
| 0:24.6 | Today we welcome Wendy E. Walton, the program. |
| 0:27.2 | Wendy is a photographer, a documentary, a conceptual artist, and an educator. |
| 0:31.9 | She's the winner of countless awards, B&H and the Gotha Fellowships to name two. |
| 0:36.5 | She's exhibited and published extensively and was recently profiled in an episode of the |
| 0:40.7 | PBS program POV. |
| 0:43.0 | And it's worth a watch. |
| 0:44.7 | However, she might be best described as a collaborator, and that's a great thing to be |
| 0:49.2 | called. |
| 0:50.2 | For 40 years, she's created photo projects with women, families, teachers, and most notably |
| 0:54.9 | children. |
| 0:56.2 | In locations throughout the world, she's led documentary investigations and collaborative |
| 1:00.8 | projects which encourage the participants to use cameras to examine their own lives, families, |
| 1:06.4 | communities, and to make images of their fantasies and dreams. |
| 1:10.7 | And the photos that Wendy created during these projects are also part of the process. |
| 1:15.1 | Her subjects altered pictures that she took, which in a sense made them co-authors of |
... |
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