Archives for posts with tag: Portrait

China, Hong Kong, and Malaysia (1 of 3)

Meetings, shoots, 3 countries, and lots of me being behind a camera


I spent the last 7 days hoping between meetings, countries, and shoots.

Last Tuesday I had a meeting in Hong Kong to research possibilities for a future lighting/fashion/city-based workshop there with some awesome instructor(s).  Was an amazing trip filled with good food, some new friends, and just a whole lot of doing what I love – spending time behind a camera.  That being said I had 5 meetings in 7 days discussing some exciting things going photographically in Asia as well as the opportunity to do a quick scouting shoot in Hong Kong for this future workshop that we will help run later this year (stay tuned!)

Some shots from my 3 days in HK last week with Penang Clan Houses and Mosques coming tomorrow!

 

A day at the Mosque

...and how to not let photography ruin a relationship and future photo opportunities.


Something I’ve been meaning to do for a while now is spend some time at our local mosques.  The area where we live is heavily influenced by Tibetan culture, Chinese culture, and also Islamic culture.  It’s actually pretty amazing to watch how that plays out in a city like this.

Today I made it a point to spend some time with a buddy who speaks Arabic, the local dialect, and Chinese fluently to take a quick tour of these cultural treasures.  I took my buddy along because speaking any of those languages (I speak Chinese and 5% of the local dialect) gives you great respect in the locals eyes.  Per usual we spent more time sitting and chatting than we did taking pictures – sitting and chatting is one of my favorite parts of photography.

Nonetheless, I want to touch on one point here.  I knew that these trips were going to be more building relationship than spending 5 hours taking pictures of whatever I wanted.  I was happy to do that and I was happy to listen to old men tell stories for almost 5 hours.  If you read my post about how we all pay back in one way or another you will get a good insight into my strong belief that great images come from “paying” for them.  In this case, I was making a deposit in the future.

I could have very easily run up into these mosques and shot to my hearts content – all the while building no relationships and making them all feel incredibly uncomfortable.  I wonder how many photo opportunities we eventually destroy with a camera?

I live literally 5 minutes away from these mosques and have the opportunity to go back, if desired, on a daily basis.  I’d be foolish to not build some strong relationships with these folks before I intended to shoot 300+ images there in one day.  I’ve gotta respect them and they have to respect me because we share the same city – I’m not passing through.

Some notes on these pictures below:  The first image is the ritualistic washing that one must undertake before heading into the mosque for prayer.  The old man below is transcribing the whole Koran.  Also, notice the Tibetan architecture that exists in these Mosques that you won’t find anywhere else in the entire world.  I’ve been in no less than two dozen monasteries throughout this area and they all look like this mosque does on the inside – yet these places serve two very different purposes.  Also Tibetan symbols such as the lotus and the “eternity knot” are strongly tied into the architecture here – mind blowing.  These are Muslims and not Buddhists.

 

Modernization

The Machine is in Motion: What now?


On Thursday I threw up a post about scouting out our local Tibetan market. I was excited to find that these markets have these old plexiglass roofs that have changes to all sorts of interesting colors.  I wanted to shoot the modernizing Tibetan culture in a place surrounded by the ancient.

Things rarely, if ever, go the way you want them to here.  The streets that I wanted to shoot on were blocked off by cars that hadn’t been there the day before.  The guys we had found turned out to be awesome – I’ll elaborate on that in a second.  Anyways, they all showed up 45 minutes late and then everyone had to leave 20 minutes after we started.  To top things off I had a flash completely bite the dust on me.  For those of you keeping track – that’s the setting, the setup, and the timeframe all shot.  Nonetheless, it was an awesome rushed 20 minute shoot.

Over a very quick Tibetan-style breakfast I learned quiet a bit about our models.  One of them is a law student with one year left until he graduates.  He also spoke fluent english.  The other is a striving business man and also a part-time student at one of the high-level colleges in our city.  Is that what you think of when you think of a Tibetan?

Here’s the contrast: Less than 10 years ago both of these guys were nomads.

NGO, humanitarian, and travel photographers everywhere undoubtedly deal with this routinely.  We go off to get the “exotic” shot in some place that we are certain hasn’t been touched by modernization only to find a monastery that owns it’s own gas station (click here & here), a generations-old workshop with a plasma screen tv and a Nintendo Wii setup inside, or a nomad with an iPhone.

What now?  What is our response supposed to be in the face of inevitable modernization?

I fear that our immediate response is to reject modernization outright rather than seeing how it’s adapted into the culture and no harm is done and how modernization has actually helped a society.  How often do we put on the self-righteous mask and end up doing more harm than good?  Am I going to refuse to teach my neighbor how to use his carbon monoxide detector simply because it represents modernization?

I know many people in western cultures that actually takes more offense to this than the changing culture does.  We as humans seem to be creatures of habit – we don’t like change.  As soon as we seen change we throw on the brakes, cry foul, and start picketing the nearest Wal-Mart.  Don’t hear me saying that modernization doesn’t have the ability to erode culture – I believe it does have that ability.  My question is simply how do we as people, often times trying to help and do the right thing, interact with this.

In most societies the machine is in motion and we can’t stop it whether we deem it good or bad.  With that in mind I think we must consider our response

  • How can we effectively document the change?
  • Do we carry a bias that actually prevents us from documenting what is actually happening
  • Do we have the right as a cultural outsider to decide for a culture if modernization is in it’s best interest?
  • If we are seeking to help, is complaining about the change rather than actually helping within the change really a good idea?
  • Are we just miffed because it’s not what we expected?  Does the monk playing the Wii ruin the shot we made in our mind?

I’m an advocate for cultural preservation, but I’m more of an advocate for actually helping rather than fighting the wind.

Some food for thought, these guys that I photographed this morning – every bit Tibetan and every bit business men, students, and future leaders.  They embrace both their culture and the change (notice those suit pants on underneath the traditional cloak). I didn’t plan the shoot this way – I was envisioning something completely different.  The fact that this is what I got should say something about the changing nomadic society.  Honestly, I love what I got.

I intentionally left this post open ended – mostly because I doubt there is an exact answer.

continue reading…

 

Market Scouting

This has nothing to do with St. Patrick's day


Our markets in town are all amazing places to take a camera (and avoid leaving money/phones/valuables in your pockets).  One of my favorites and one of the only places on the planet (that I know of) where you will find Muslims selling Tibetan goods to Tibetans is at our local Tibetan market.  The fact that I saw 4 very unique and individual ethnic groups in one setting is what makes where I live simply amazing.  Depending on whose counting, we have as many as 7 unique ethnic groups in one place.

I spent close to 3 hours today with a student on a photo assignment as well as scouting some locations for a shoot on Friday.  It’s always nice to come home with images you are proud of from a scouting trip – excited for Friday’s shoot (stay tuned)

Some Highlights:

  1. Chinese girl yelling at me in English “My name is China!”
  2. Saw a piece of Tibetan Coral that cost 50,000RMB (~$7,300 USD) ie, more than my first car.
  3. Was told “Your head is really small for you being so big” – I have to disagree
  4. Met a beggar that has – no kidding – “Dreams of studying Chinese Kung Fu”
  5. Was stoked to shoot w/ a student catching on and just “Getting it”

Like I said, it’s nice to scout but at the same time come home with pictures you are proud of. -

Pictures after the break

continue reading…

 
Brian Hirschy Photography