
Jacob Baynham -
Brothers Near Roadside Bomb - Bharak, Afghanistan

Lee Lee
Fatehpur Sikri Burial Ground, India

Kirsten Baynham
Firelight, Burma
Proceeds will benefit the Lao Women Weavers organization
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Artists:
Joseph
Amram
Colfax
Jacob Baynham
Eyes of Afghanistan
go
to Jacob's blog from Asia
Kirsten Baynham:
Faces of Asia
Laos, India, Burma & Afghanistan
Beth Daniel
Buenos Aires & Cairo
Lee
Lee
Tibet,
China, India & Bosnia
Izabela
Lundberg
Survivors
Victoria Seligman
Portraits of Hmong Women & Children
Sa Pa, Vietnam
Exhibition:
March 1-31, 2008
420 Downing Street, Denver
Opening Reception:
Saturday, March 22nd 2008, 6-9pm
Viewing
space open daily from 9-5
303.570.3152
e'mail
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Colfax Avenue at Logan Street, Denver.
Dashboard pinhole photograph taken on 4/29/2007.
©2007 Joseph Amram - All rights reseved.
Colfax
Joseph Amram
COLFAX
Colfax is the street of nomads. Historically, it has been the street
that brought the people that brought change to Denver. Now Colfax
itself is shifting in nature because of vast urban planning projects.
Although, it is not the first major change Colfax has gone through,
it is one we can witness and experience in our lifetime. Colfax
changes and the face of Denver changes.
TIN CAN
The two images on display are part of an ongoing series. They are
32 x 80 inches enlargements of 4 x 10 inches paper negatives. The
process I use, pinhole photography, is the most primitive form of
photography and it does not require a camera per se; rather, I use
a tin can with a tiny hole centered in one side, and photosensitive
paper wrapped against the inside wall of the can. The exposure times
stretch from 2 minutes to 10 minutes, or even longer depending on
the amount of light.
IMPROVISED IMAGES
When I looked at the first picture I took with this pinhole tin
can, I was immediately struck by how the whole world seem to be
"sucked" into it. My education in photography has been
one of controlled visions, sophisticated instruments and processes.
Pinhole photography is primitive, slow, has no viewfinder, no lens,
no preconceived reference. In this process I feel that I allow more
than I create. |

Izabela Lundberg - Ethiopia
Survivors
Portraits of Torture
& War Trauma Survivors who are seeking asylum in Denver
Izabela Lundberg
Proceeds from the sale of Izabela's work will benefit the
Rocky
Mountain Survivors Center
Rocky Mountain Survivors Center (RMSC) is a nonprofit organization
that assists survivors of torture and war trauma, and their families,
to heal and rebuild their lives. The center offers asylum legal
representation, healthcare and psychosocial services, is actively
pursuing building the capacity of other providers to respond to
the needs of torture survivors, and is building a community development
component to the work. RMSC is profoundly impressed by the dignity,
courage and resilience of survivors of torture- ordinary people
who suffer extraordinary trauma, yet choose to recover- and seeks
to work with the communities and families in which survivors live,
to find ways to bring the effects of torture out of the shadows
and into the healing light of day.
Trust and hope were destroyed through the human rights
abuses perpetrated by a few people. Rebuilding trust and hope takes
an entire community.
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Hmong Women & Children
Sa Pa, Vietnam
Victoria Seligman
"My life experiences have afforded me unique interactions
with people rarely photographed so intimately. As a physician, I
have become attuned to nonverbal emotive expression of one's self
and consider myself a keep and privileged observer. These photos
were taken on a rural trek in the tribal region of Sa Pa, Northern
Vietnam. They are glimpses of Hmong women and children whose wisdom
surpasses their age."
Proceeds from the sale of Victoria's work will benefit
Health for Cambodia, an organization founded to better the education
for physicians in Cambodia, and to support micro-credit projects
for Cambodian Women with HIV
please visit www.HealthForCambodia.org starting April 2008
for more information
e-mail
Victoria
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Confined Shrines
Myanmar
Lee
Lee
These mixed media works on paper were done incorporating photographic
xerox transfers of the cages that envelop the shrines in Myanmar.
The caged Buddhist shrines, prevalent throughtout the country, are
a poignant reflection of the oppressive regime.
Lee Lee is supporting Clear
Path International, who works clearing landmines &
unexploded ordinance along the Burma/Thai border as well as in Cambodia
and Vietnam.
e-mail
Lee Lee |
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