All posts by Inge Morath Estate

Aparna Jayakumar: Goodbye Padmini

Aparna Jayakumar (India) – Goodbye Padmini,  An Ode To Bombay’s Black-and-yellow Padmini Taxis

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Bombay’s ubiquitous black and yellow taxi is an iconic image of the city. The 1100D, or the ‘Premier Padmini’ as it is called here, was originally manufactured in India between 1964 and 2000 by the Italian company, Fiat. The charm of the Padmini taxi is unique, with its disco-lights, over the top interiors, flowers and incense sticks, brightly coloured seat covers, zany taxi art and icons of various Gods, or Bollywood stars (or both side by side). There is much old-world romance associated with these sleek black and yellow wheels. They are an inextricable part of the Bombay experience.

Bombay’s taxis turned 100 in 2011. Motorized cabs replaced the horse-driven Victoria buggies in 1911 and have been serving the city ever since. But instead of celebrating, Bombay’s taxi drivers have had much to worry about. The number of taxis plying the streets is in steady decline. In 1997, Bombay had over 60,000 taxis to cater to a population of 8 million. Today Bombay’s population is well over 20 million but there are only around 40,000 cabs. Continue reading Aparna Jayakumar: Goodbye Padmini

Maria M. Litwa: Inside Geneva Camp

Maria M. Litwa (Poland/Germany): Inside Geneva Camp

‘Inside Geneva Camp’ is a multimedia story about three young women who live in Geneva Camp in Dhaka. It’s the largest ghetto-like settlement for the Urdu speaking minority – locally known as ‘Biharis’ – in Bengali speaking nation of Bangladesh. A place where a huge number of this language minority lives since 40 years. Education and also marriage seem to be the only possibilities for women to escape from this stigmatized spot and to become integrated into the Bangladeshi society.

The enmeshment of the history of the ‘Bihari’ community and the personal statements of Rina (14, housewife), Shabnam (20, student) and Putul (24, teacher) allows an empathetic insight into the lives of those who still suffer from the consequences of the Partition of British India in 1947. Continue reading Maria M. Litwa: Inside Geneva Camp

Yen Nie Yong: Past Lives

Yen Nie Yong (Malaysia): Past Lives

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We leave, thinking we don’t want to return but when we finally do, wish we’d never left. Moving to the city almost a decade ago, I thought I could always find my hometown as I’d left it. But my visit last year dispelled the nostalgia. Confronted by an acute sense of unfamiliarity with the former landscape of my past and its current inhabitants, I embarked on a journey to photograph towns and places that friends and strangers have called home in Malaysia. These towns were once lively, bustling with economic activities and the symbol of wealth and glory. But they have since faded. Continue reading Yen Nie Yong: Past Lives

Inge Morath Award, 2013 Guidelines

The Inge Morath Award, 2013

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The Magnum Foundation and the Inge Morath Foundation announce the 12th annual Inge Morath Award. The annual

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award of $5,000 is given to a female photographer under the age of 30, to support the completion of a long-term documentary project. One award winner and up to two finalists are selected by a jury composed of Magnum photographers and the director of the Inge Morath Foundation. Inge Morath was an Austrian-born photographer who was associated with Magnum Photos for nearly fifty years. After her death in 2002, the Inge Morath Foundation was established to manage Morath’s estate and facilitate the study and appreciation of her contribution to photography. Because Morath devoted much of her enthusiasm to encouraging women photographers, her colleagues at Magnum Photos established the Inge Morath Award in her honor. The award is now administered by the Magnum Foundation as part of its mission of supporting the next generation of socially-conscious documentary photographers, in cooperation with the Inge Morath Foundation. Magnum Foundation logoPast winners of the Inge Morath Award include: Isadora Kosofsky (US, ’12), for Selections from “The Three” and “This Existence;” Zhe Chen (China, ’11) for Bees; Lurdes R. Basolí (Spain, ’10) for Caracas, The City of Lost Bullets and Claire Martin (Australia, ’10) for Selections from The Downtown East Side and Slab City; Emily Schiffer (US, ’09) for Cheyenne River; Kathryn Cook (US, ’08) for Memory Denied: Turkey and the Armenian Genocide; Olivia Arthur (UK, ’07) for The Middle Distance; Jessica Dimmock (US, ’06) for The Ninth Floor; Mimi Chakarova (US, ’06) for Sex Trafficking in Eastern Europe; Claudia Guadarrama (MX, ’05) for Before the Limit; and Ami Vitale (US, ’02), for Kashmir.

Deadline:

All submissions must be postmarked or delivered by April 30th, 2013.

Form of Submission:

Your submission must be delivered as a PDF file. Quicktime, Powerpoint, and other formats will NOT be accepted. – (How do I create a PDF with a Mac? How do I create a PDF with a PC?) – The first page of your PDF should show your name and the title of your project. Each subsequent page should present a single photograph (unless groups of images are required) with caption (if relevant), using the full frame of the PDF page. – Please do NOT format your PDF as a slideshow. Also, please do not password-protect your file. – A folder containing individual image files (JPEGs) must accompany the PDF file.

Image Specifications:

– Your submission must include 40 – 60 photographs (1200 pixels on the longest side @ 150 DPI saved as a JPEG compression at 8 minimum). – In the folder containing your individual images, please use numbered filenames indicating the image sequence, with the number coming first in the file name and then last name; for example: 01_Smith, 02_Smith, 03_Smith etc. (use only two digit numbers; 01, 02, 03, etc.).

Required Support Material:

– Project description. This should describe the project and how the Award will be used to complete work on the project. – Curriculum Vitae (maximum three pages) including name, email address, telephone number, and mailing address. – Photocopy or scan of ID clearly showing date of birth. All applicants must be under the age of 30 on April 30th, 2012 (in other words, if April 30th is your birthday, and you’re turning 30, then you’re no longer eligible to submit a proposal).

Digital Submission:

– If you wish to submit your files digitally, please compress your submission (PDF + folder of JPEGs) into ONE FILE (for example, using .zip or .rar) before sending. – Digital files may be submitted to this address: https://dropbox.yousendit.com/ingemorath – It is highly recommended that anyone submitting digitally contact the Inge Morath Foundation to confirm that your submission has been received. Please do so by email, not by phone. You will be notified when your submission is processed.

Submissions By Mail:

– Please label your CD with your name and contact information, and please test the CD to ensure that both it and all your files are functional. – Submissions may be mailed to the address below: Inge Morath Award c/o Magnum Foundation 547 West 27th Street, 4th Floor New York, NY 10001 USA

Return of Submissions:

Submissions that are not accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope will not be returned. Applicants waive any claims for loss of or damage to their submissions.

Announcement of Winner:

The winner of the Inge Morath Award will be announced on the web sites of the Magnum Foundation and the Inge Morath Foundation in July, 2013.

Fine Print:

All submissions must consist of work done solely by the submitting photographer. Photographers represented by Magnum Photos and their immediate relatives are not eligible. IM Award recipients and finalists grant the Magnum Foundation a license to reproduce, display and distribute their submissions solely in connection with the administration and judging of the Inge Morath Award, including on the Magnum Foundation website and the Inge Morath Foundation website. IM Award recipients agree that any future publication, exhibition or display of the funded project shall credit the Inge Morath Award and the Magnum Foundation. Upon completion of the funded project, a final (digital) copy must be provided to the Magnum Foundation. The Foundation, in furtherance of its charitable purposes, may, in the future, (1) display the project on its website and make it available for display on the website of the Inge Morath Foundation; and (2) publicly display the project (or excepts from it) in connection with exhibitions or promotional materials related to the Inge Morath Award. The Foundation will credit the artist as the author and copyright holder of her photographs. IM Award recipients may be required to provide additional identifying information prior to receiving payment.

Further Information:

IM Foundation Contact Info

Alice Carfrae: Tin Girls

Alice Carfare (UK): Tin Girls

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It is said that in Sindhupalchok, Nepal, you can tell which household has sold a daughter, or lost a mother by looking at the rooftops of the villages. The ones with the newer corrugated tin as opposed to the traditional timber and slate indicate that there has been a sacrifice made. A selfless act to try and better the family’s situation. The unaffectionate nickname given to these women who gave their lives is ‘Tin Girls’. Nepal is one of the major source countries for trafficked women in South Asia.

An increasing number of women are being trafficked from Nepal to the middle east to work as domestic slaves. They are recruited by ‘agencies’ who promise an escape from the hardship they often face at home. Few are lucky and manage to make a meagre wage to send back home but most have their passports visas and belongings stripped from them on arrival and are forced into slavery. Most only return when they have become to sick to work because of exhaustion, pregnancy or STIs contracted through rape. These women are often overworked, routinely beaten, raped and tortured. Continue reading Alice Carfrae: Tin Girls

Eunice Adorno: Flower Women

Eunice Adorno (Mexico): Flower Women

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Flower women is an approach of the life stories of a group of Mennonite women who have allowed me to photograph intimate spaces and daily experiences within their community, Nuevo Ideal, in Durango, and The Onda Zacatecas. The images focus on the emotional bonds between these women and reveal peaceful and harmonious moments which lead us to perceive their lifestyles as more than simply conservative and rigid. 
Our dialogues was in Spanish, or the High and Low German they speak amongst themselves, or through signaled gestures. But the real communication is through feelings shared between the women and me, and framed inside the pictures – passions, friendships, secrets, pleasures, and amusements. Continue reading Eunice Adorno: Flower Women

Maria Pleshkova: Days of War, a Pillow Book

Maria Pleshkova (Russia): Days of War, a Pillow Book

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‘War’ and ‘Waiting’ begin with the same letter. I’m not a soldier’s mother, neither am I a soldier’s wife. But I know what it feels like when the loved one goes to war. It happened to me – and war became a very personal matter. It became part of my life, of my thoughts and soul. For a while it dominated me. I spent my time waiting, worrying, counting days and hoping for the best. I couldn’t unglue myself from thinking about the conflict zone, I spent days following the news and photos. I began to have dreams about war. I wished I had been there. Every single day I was hoping to get a message from my friend saying that he was alive and well. Sometimes I felt it was the conflict zone – not my peaceful city – where real life was going on. I felt like a character in a play or simply a puppet. Everything around me seemed artificial. War was being fought out there. And everything was changing: the country and people in distant places, the global political situation… I was changing, too. Now it’s all over. But I think that war left a stigma on me,a kind of incurable deformity.

Carlotta Zarattini: The White Building

Carlotta Zarattini (Italy): The White Building, A Mirror of Cambodia
Inge Morath Award Finalist, 2012

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Families and businessmen, elderly and children, drug addicts and poets, all live in the same building, a unique microcosm of Cambodian society. The White Building mirrors Phnom Penh’s hidden soul. It throbs and hums like a hodgepodge construction, but carries a distinct flavor left since its construction in 1963, when it was supposed to host the athletes of the Southeast Asian Peninsular Games. Now a mixture between a slum and a sanctuary, its residents include poets and illiterates, newly-weds and mistresses. As sunlight shines through window slits and shadows are cast on its white walls, the people within learn to tell time. Life in the White Building remains a distinctly Cambodian narrative, plastered by graffiti and stories that reach into memories and dreams.

In the 1960s Cambodia saw a renaissance in architecture and the arts. Phnom Penh flourished. Amidst a positive outlook on the potential for a bright future, one of history’s darkest chapters was about to begin. The Khmer Rouge regime took power in 1970. Cambodia changed forever. During the following years, the country saw its colors fade. Eyes lost shimmer. Continue reading Carlotta Zarattini: The White Building

Isadora Kosofsky: Selections from The Three and This Existence

Isadora Kosofsky (US): Selections from “The Three” & “This Existence”
Inge Morath Award Recipient, 2012

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“The Three,” the first section of my long-term project, documents Jeanie, 82, Will, 84, and Adina, 90, individuals bound by their relationship. They view their connection as a shield from the loneliness of aging. Even though Jeanie, Will and Adina’s relationship began at a senior care facility, the outside world is more like home. For them, the care center is a reminder of solitude. Attempting to find solace within themselves, they seek escape with each other. In describing their bond, Will shares, “We live above the law. Not outside the law, but above the law. We are not outlaws.”

Through their relationship, Jean, Will and Adina challenge socio-cultural norms projected about the elderly. Jeanie, reflecting on her life, confides, “I do not wish to assume all the garments of maturity.” Most of the women I photograph have felt marginalized as females; now Jeanie seeks empowerment, reiterating, “I want to be free.” For many of my subjects, aging is often paradoxically a form of both loss and liberation. The grief following my grandmother’s death led me to document the lives and relationships of the elderly, particularly women, in Los Angeles over the course of four years. Continue reading Isadora Kosofsky: Selections from The Three and This Existence

Inge Morath: 101 Fashion & Celebrity Photos

101 Fashion & Celebrity Photos by Inge Morath (a publication preview)

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One need look no further than Morath’s Master Story List, the index to her assignments and projects, to conclude that she was neither a fashion photographer nor a paparazzi. In fact, during her early years as a “greenhorn” at Magnum, Morath was frequently given fashion related assignments that were of lesser interest to her senior colleagues. We may speculate that stories on debutantes coming out in London (Mayfair and Soho, 1953), fairs and dog shows (Puck’s Fair and Cruft’s Dog Show, both 1954), and the Bal d’Hiver in Paris (1954), were among the subjects regarded as more appropriate for a younger member, and perhaps also as more appropriate to her gender. (During the 1950s Morath was, together with Eve Arnold, one of only two female members of the agency.) Indeed, during her first three years with Magnum, Morath was assigned numerous “feminine” subjects, such as Mrs. David Niven (1953), the Duchess of Marlborough at Blenheim Palace (1954), and Lola de Vilato (1955), sister of Pablo Picasso, as well as stories on American Girls in Paris and the Beauty and the Beast Fashion Show (both Paris, 1954).

According to Morath, before sending her off to work on an early story in Spain (Generation Women, 1955), Robert Capa insisted that she start to dress “like a lady.” “I took his advice,” she later wrote, “and my reward was the look on his face when I showed up in my first Balenciaga.” Morath had been introduced to the now legendary designer while working on another “feminine” subject, a portrait of Marie Louise Bosquet, Paris editor of Harper’s Bazaar (1955).

In many stories of her stories from the 1950s, we find an early hint of Morath’s interest in fashion as related to style and costuming, themes which would re-appear in her later, large-scale projects considering the relationship of performance to personal identity. Morath’s pictures, as pictures, are beautiful, but they are also self-reflexive statements about photography itself, and the photographic construction of beauty. In her documentation of the Beauty and the Beast Fashion Show, for example, Morath photographed the runway models from behind, in unflattering silhouette, and outdoors surrounded by gawking onlookers and photographers; in one, the photographer bends the model’s back and neck to grotesquely follow the line of her dog’s back and neck. The dog is to the model, in these pictures, what the model is to the photographer: an obedient accessory. The Beauty and the Beast series is perfectly complimented by a picture from 1958, in which a dog, also photographed from behind, is seated in the place of honor at a fashion show. A model, on a makeshift runway of carpets, stands directly in front of the dog in her fur coat, gazing blankly into Morath’s camera.

Similarly, in her work on film and stage sets, Morath invariably sought to capture the mise-enscène. Like many Magnum photographers, Morath worked as a still photographer on numerous motion picture sets. John Huston’s Moulin Rouge (1953) was one of her earliest assignments, and was her first time working in a film-studio. Having fulfilled the requirements of the story by photographing the stars, Zsa Zsa Gabor and José Ferrer, Morath also carefully documented make-up artists at work and dancers resting between takes. While photographing Huston’s The Unforgiven (1960), starring Audrey Hepburn, Burt Lancaster, and Audie Murphy, Morath accompanied the director and his friends duck hunting on a mountain lake outside Durango, Mexico. Photographing the excursion, Morath saw through her telephoto lens that Murphy had capsized his boat 350 feet from shore, and that, stunned, he was drowning. A skilled swimmer, Morath stripped to her underwear and towed Murphy ashore by her bra strap while the hunt continued uninterrupted. Morath worked again with Huston in 1960, on The Misfits, a blockbuster film featuring Marilyn Monroe, Clark Gable, and Montgomery Clift, with a screenplay by Arthur Miller. Magnum Photos had been given exclusive rights to photograph the making of the movie, and Morath and Henri Cartier-Bresson were the first of nine photographers to work on location, outside Reno, Nevada, during its filming. Morath met Miller while working on The Misfits, and, following Miller’s divorce from Monroe, they were married on February 17, 1962.

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At home and wherever she traveled, Morath sought out, befriended, and photographed fellow artists. During the ‘50s she photographed Jean Arp and Alberto Giacometti, among others, for Robert Delpire’s magazine L’Oeil. She met the artist Saul Steinberg in 1958. When she went to his home to make a portrait, Steinberg came to the door wearing a mask that he had fashioned from a paper bag. After she re-located to the US, Morath and Steinberg collaborated on a series of portraits, inviting individuals and groups of people to pose for Morath wearing Steinberg’s masks. Morath also worked collaboratively with her husband on several projects, including the books In Russia (1969) and Chinese Encounters (1979), which documented their meetings with dissident artists and writers in the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China. Throughout their forty-year long marriage, Morath extensively documented productions of Miller’s plays, bringing her into contact with a wide range of stage actors, including Faye Dunaway (After the Fall, 1963), Vanessa Redgrave (Playing for Time, 1979), and Dustin Hoffman (Death of a Salesman, 1975). During the ‘70s, she also regularly documented productions of the Circle In the Square Theatre and the Living Theatre, and in ’77 she produced a story on the all-female Takarazuka Theatre in Japan. With Miller’s election as the first American president of PEN, in 1965, Morath also increasingly focused on portraits of writers, among the most poignant of which are those of women, including Janet Flanner (1973) and Elizabeth Hardwick (1978), as well as Cosmopolitan Magazine editor Helen Gurley Brown (1982).

In her life, as in her photographic work, Inge Morath celebrated the ways that the human creative spirit finds expression: through social and religious rituals, posturing and costuming, through work, sport, and through dance, music, art, and theatre. Like many of her early Magnum colleagues, in the early years of her career Morath was motivated by a fundamental humanism, shaped as much by the experience of war as by its lingering shadow over post-war Europe. This motivation grew, in Morath’s mature work, into a motif as she documented the endurance of the human spirit under situations of transformation and duress. If a thread can be said to run through her work from beginning to end, it is the marvel of human creativity, which Morath both documents and exemplifies in her photography. What distinguishes Inge Morath’s work from that of her colleagues is the consistency of her eye for life’s brilliant theatricality. Whether photographing festivals or artists’ studios, on film sets or on the street; whether photographing celebrities or strangers, on the street or on a fashion runway, Morath invariably encountered the world around her as a stage for the performance of life, each of her subjects contributing equally to its beauty.

Inge Morath: Fashion & Celebrity (forthcoming from Steidl) will present a selection of approximately 200 black-and-white and color photographs which tie together the many disparate creative subjects examined by Morath during her 50 year career. In these photographs, we encounter both Morath’s gentle humor and her exquisite sensitivity as she captures the vulnerability of her subjects opening themselves to her. In the process, we re-discover Morath as a photographer with a unique and long-lasting vision for the emergence of new forms of creativity from traditional ones. The depth and the motivation for her vision are illuminated by Morath’s own words: “survival should never be allowed to render the past harmless.”