lottie hedley photography

A little over a year ago, after exchanging letters, I spent my first stint on the Hilty farm in Smyrna Mills, Northern Maine. This is a work in progress which I hope to expand to include other farms and businesses which operate in a way so as to encourage stewardship and sustainability.

In the Hilty household life works in circles. Food at meals is passed around the table in a clockwise circle; while questions regarding the morning’s bible reading come around the table in an anti-clockwise direction. The seasons impress their own circular influence on the family’s market gardening business and their method of farming cycles the soil through a process to ensure the soil is enriched rather than stripped. Perhaps most importantly, the family’s philosophy on farming for the future generations speaks to an over-arching cycle.

The Hilty family are part of a burgeoning sustainable farm movement. They believe the Lord intended us to be stewards of the land. Their philosophy is to work with the land instead of against it so their children don’t have to find answers for the problems they’ve created by farming the land to excess.—Lottie Hedley

Lottie Hedley is a lawyer turned photographer from a dairy farm in New Zealand who is currently searching for the meaning of community through photography. Having left her job in corporate law in London at the end of 2009, Hedley attended the professional certificate program at Maine Media College in Rockport, ME and recently finished up an internship at VII Photo Agency in New York City. She is currently based in London.

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

lottie hedley photography

This post was contributed by photographer Alex Potter

If you’re a photographer, you can now promote your new series, website, gallery show, recent assignment, etc. on Feature Shoot for an affordable price. Find out about becoming a Spotlight Photographer here.

Mark-Makela photography

3:30 AM arrival, Friday, July 20, Wise, VA. Early morning darkness covered the hills and valleys, however, despite the rain 500 people had already lined up for free medical and dental care.

The day before I had driven 10 hours from Philadelphia to get to the Remote Area Medical (RAM) three day clinic in SW Virginia. RAM has been providing free healthcare since 1985 for uninsured and underinsured Americans and for people worldwide. This would be their 674th expedition.

Witnessing horrific health cases, one after the other, was a heartbreaking experience. People came from 14 states seeking care, and an estimated 1,700 patients were admitted for treatment the first day.

A twenty year old had 20 teeth extracted. A mother of two who has lost her job due to poor eye sight came for eye care and glasses. A three year old had to undergo oral surgery for a root canal and front teeth extraction. These as just a few of the heart wrenching health cases I observed.

It was extraordinary to see the gathering of such generosity with hundreds of healthcare professionals and volunteers donating their time and expertise to this worthy cause. I felt privileged to have documented the day.—Mark Makela

Based in Philadelphia, Mark Makela is a photojournalist working worldwide specializing in editorial, documentary and portrait photography.

Mark-Makela photography

Mark-Makela photography

Mark-Makela photography

Mark-Makela photography

Mark-Makela photography

Mark-Makela photography

Mark-Makela photography

If you’re a photographer, you can now promote your new series, website, gallery show, recent assignment, etc. on Feature Shoot for an affordable price. Find out about becoming a Spotlight Photographer here.

Giles-Revell photography

By photographing vibrant pigments underwater, London-based photographer Giles Revell has imagined what pressure must feel like for free-divers.

Freediving is an exteme sport also referred to as apnea, where men and women plunge without any gear into the ocean on one breath. The best freedivers in the world can hold their breath for four minutes sometimes reaching depths of over 700 feet as the ocean’s weight compresses on their body. If safety precautions are not followed, divers can lose consciousness and experience a blackout.

Revell, represented by VAUGHAN HANNIGAN, photographed this series for The Times Magazine: Eureka.

Giles-Revell photography

Giles-Revell photography

Giles-Revell photography

Giles-Revell photography

Read an interview with Kusters here.

Tim-Navis mud springs Iceland

If there was ever a moment in my life where everything was yin and yang – this place was it. It was extremely loud. It was extremely silent. It was in motion. It was still. It was volatile. It was peaceful. It was empty. It was full. It was hot. It was cold. It was everything and I can’t explain why. The day we were there, no one else was in the area. It was sleeting wet, icy snow all over us. Soaking our equipment, hands and minds.

It’s moments like these where I’m glad I don’t like to travel during tourist season. Had we gone in the more optimal conditions of summer, who knows how many people would have been out there getting in the way of our work. We had this unique place all to ourselves. If anything were to have gone wrong, for example, someone falling into a pit, we would have been screwed.—Tim Navis

Los Angeles photographer Tim Navis shot these stunning images of boiling mud springs in Namaskard, Iceland while working collaboratively with fellow photographer Kim Holtermand and composer Deru making the Outliers Vol 1, a series of short films made on their journey through the remote countryside of Iceland.  The films will be released by Scenic in October along with a book of photographs and limited edition prints.

Tim-Navis mud springs Iceland

Tim-Navis mud springs Iceland

Tim-Navis mud springs Iceland

Tim-Navis mud springs Iceland

Tim-Navis mud springs Iceland

Tim-Navis mud springs Iceland

Tim-Navis mud springs Iceland

via The Fox is Black

If you’re a photographer, you can now promote your new series, website, gallery show, recent assignment, etc. on Feature Shoot for an affordable price. Find out about becoming a Spotlight Photographer here.

Alinka Echeverria photography

The six million strong annual pilgrimage to the Basilica de Guadalupe in Mexico City marks the anniversary of the apparitions of the Virgin of Guadalupe in 1531 to the indigenous man Juan Diego, and the miraculous appearance of her image onto his cloak. The Virgin appeared on the sacred site of the Aztec Goddess Tonantzin. Belief in her apparitions and their evidence -the sacred image of a miracle- marked a shift to Catholic iconography in Mexico: an important development for the Spanish conquerors for whom evangelization was imperative to the success of the Empire.

This work explores the relationship between image and belief and the power of iconic images from an anthropological perspective, asking how and why images are needed at a psychological level in order to believe.—Alinka Echeverria

Alinka Echeverria is a graduate of The International Center of Photography in New York and has an M.A in Social Anthropology from The University of Edinburgh. Her work has been featured in over forty exhibitions worldwide. This work, The Road to Tepeyac, was most recently exhibited at the Festival de la Luz in Buenos Aires. She is currently based in London.

Alinka Echeverria photography

Alinka Echeverria photography

Alinka Echeverria photography

Alinka Echeverria photography

Alinka Echeverria photography

This post was contributed by photographer Alex Potter

Alfonso-Calero photography

Photographer Alfonso Calero captured these abstract landscapes inspired by the painter Mark Rothko using a variety of methods he explains on Australian Photography. Based in Sydney, Calero shoots food, portraits, landscapes and travel subjects for a variety of clients. Four years ago he started his own company based around  travel education and tours delivering photography workshops in Australia, Japan, Philippines and Spain. He is represented by Wonderful Machine.

Alfonso-Calero photography

Alfonso-Calero photography

Alfonso-Calero photography

Alfonso-Calero photography

Alfonso-Calero photography

Alfonso-Calero photography

Bolivian Mennonites Jordi Ruiz Cirera

They arrived in Bolivia during the fifties, coming from Canada, Mexico or Belize, where their lifestyle was being threatened. In Canada the young people wasn’t taking the right path, and then the government banned their education system. That was enough for leaving the country, and so a group of them went to Bolivia invited by the government with the promise of land and religious freedom. Nowadays in Bolivia, there are more than fifty thousand Mennonites, or Menonos, as they are called here, although the exact number is difficult to know as many of them are living unregistered or with foreign passports. They still live as their ancestors did on the S.XVI Germany, without cars, electricity, telephone, and extremely isolated from the local community.—Jordi Ruiz Cirera

Jordi Ruiz Cirera is a Spanish documentary photographer based in London. Featured is a selection of work from his long term project documenting the lifestyle Bolivian Mennonites.

Bolivian Mennonites Jordi Ruiz Cirera

Bolivian Mennonites Jordi Ruiz Cirera

Bolivian Mennonites Jordi Ruiz Cirera

Bolivian Mennonites Jordi Ruiz Cirera

Bolivian Mennonites Jordi Ruiz Cirera

Bolivian Mennonites Jordi Ruiz Cirera

Bolivian Mennonites Jordi Ruiz Cirera

Bolivian Mennonites Jordi Ruiz Cirera

This post was contributed by photographer Alex Potter

Aujin-Rew photography

South Korean street photographer Aujin Rew initially studied architecture. While attending graduate school in the US, she bought a small digital camera and started to immerse herself in taking photos. Her series Where We Pray examines places of worship in and the environment surrounding them. Most of the images shown were taken in Singapore’s red-light district.

Aujin-Rew photography

Aujin-Rew photography

Aujin-Rew photography

Aujin-Rew photography

Aujin-Rew photography

Aujin-Rew photography

This post was contributed by photographer Alex Potter

If you’re a photographer, you can now promote your new series, website, gallery show, recent assignment, etc. on Feature Shoot for an affordable price. Find out about becoming a Spotlight Photographer here.

Tony-Fouhse photography

In the Fall of 2010 Ottowa photographer Tony Fouhse asked Stephanie MacDonald if there was something he could do to help her. Stephanie is a heroin addict. She asked him to help her get into rehab.

And so began a journey that lasted nine months, that began in despair and moved through horror towards hope, that took twists and turns unimaginable when they began. Told through portraits of Stephanie, photographs of her notes to Tony and in Stephanie’s own words, LIVE THROUGH THIS is a book that describes, defines and evokes that harrowing journey.

We asked Tony some questions about his relationship with Stephanie and the emotional toll this series has taken on him both as a person and a photographer.

Tony-Fouhse photography

Tell me about “Live Through This”- how did you begin working on it? Why was it an important story for you to tell?
“From 2007 to 2010 I collaborated with a group of crack addicts in Ottawa, shooting portraits. I worked those four years on one 30 meter strip of sidewalk, ‘the block’, that this particular society of addicts called home.

“I got to know many of the addicts quite well, but I didn’t want to change, save or judge them; I just wanted to take pictures. Then, the last year of that project I met Stephanie. There was just something about her and one day I blurted out the words, “Is there something I can do to help you?”.

Tony-Fouhse photography

“She asked me to help her get into rehab. I asked her if I could photograph the process as she moved from where she was to where she wanted to be. She agreed and we began. That trip Steph and I took lasted nine months, began in despair and moved through horror towards hope. It took twists and turns neither Stephanie nor I could have imagined when we began.

“All my work straddles the lines between portraiture, sociology, anthropology, art and the document, but mostly I consider myself a portrait photographer, so this is the approach I took with this “Live Through This”.

Tony-Fouhse photography

“In terms of the importance of telling the story, well, that all came afterwards. The reason I take pictures is to have experiences, that’s what’s important to me. The photos are, really, just souvenirs of the experience. So, to quote T.S. Eliot: ‘We had the experience but missed the meaning. And approach to the meaning restores the experience In a different form’.”

Tony-Fouhse photography

The project involves images, documents and text. How do these components work together to tell the story of Steph’s struggle with addiction?
“As I mention above, I’m a portrait photographer. Almost all the photos of Steph are shot with her cooperation and input, they were set up. In almost all of them she is against a plain background with minimal perspective, there is no real context. This approach makes it very difficult to tell a story the way you would if you were a traditional photojournalism or documentary photographer.

“By adding the notes and documents the arc of the story is fleshed out. Those photos provide slivers of context and news that are missing in most of the portraits.”

Tony-Fouhse photography

The text is just as arresting and moving as the images. Tell us about how it came to be, and about your decision to retain Steph’s voice?
“I knew, after we had finished shooting this thing, that i wanted to somehow add Steph’s voice. She has a very honest, insightful and poetic way of putting things. She now lives in Nova Scotia and I only see her once a year or so, so we worked on the writing over the internet. I’d ask her questions and she would answer them.

“She writes just like she talks, you can hear her voice in her writing. She uses lots of wrong grammar and malapropisms (like calling a migraine a “mindgraine”, she says “long and behold” instead of lo and behold). She never uses spell check and doesn’t seem to care if a word is misspelled or not. It never occurred to me to change what and how she wrote.

“It was also important to me to have her as an active participant in this thing, that she not just be “the subject”. In the book, her words will be included as a separate, removable booklet. The symbolism of this, to me, is that it reflects the whole process in a way: we are two distinct people who came together to do this. The photos are mine, the words are hers. They are joined together in a book but can also exist, the photos and the words, as separate objects.”

Tony-Fouhse photography

At a certain point, your voice is just as present as Steph’s. The story becomes about your relationship with your subject. What does Steph mean to you? What do you think you mean to Steph?
“We are friends.”

What sort of ethical considerations did you have regarding your involvement in your subject’s life?
“Not a day went by when I didn’t ask myself if I was doing what I was doing for the good of the “project” or if I was doing this to help Steph. The fact is, I believe that no one thing is ever the result of just one other thing, that there are always many complicated reasons why anyone does anything.

“During the time I spent with her I was always being faced with situations where it was impossible to make a “correct” choice. I’m sure that certain aspects of what we did together enabled her, just as I’m sure that our involvement also helped her move away from the drug life.”

Tony-Fouhse photography

What was is like photographing a person’s more sorrowful, painful moments? How did you gain access to those moments? How did they make you feel as an observer?
‘We got to know one another fairly quickly, we began to have conversations; conversations about all kinds of stuff: the creative process, being a junkie, the past and the future, and just plain day-to-day things. It didn’t take long to become friends. When we were together and doing stuff, there were lots of times that were pure horror. But I wasn’t an observer, I was a friend, so I would often just put my camera away and deal with whatever drama was happening. Probably not the best thing for a photographer to do, but the only option if you are a friend.

“The whole process had a profound effect on me. I got bent out of shape, confused, frustrated and emotionally wrecked.”

Tony-Fouhse photography

This post was contributed by photographer Greta Rybus.

If you’re a photographer, you can now promote your new series, website, gallery show, recent assignment, etc. on Feature Shoot for a very affordable price. Find out about becoming a Spotlight Photographer here.