Posts Tagged ‘Photos’
Victor Cruz in GQ.
Wednesday, October 17th, 2012
For the ladies, since I know you all love a sharp dressed man. Photography by Ben Watts.
Check out the photos below…
If you think pinstriped suits with bold, chalky lines will make you look like a douchey 1980s Wall Street wannabe, you haven’t seen this slimmer, shorter, altogether cooler new generation. Here, New York Giants breakout Victor Cruz proves these suits have a whole new swagger.
Read their full feature here: Victor Cruz – GQ September 2012.
…via.
Diplo Presents Blow Your Head Vol. 1: Dancehall.
Tuesday, October 2nd, 2012
Producer Diplo and photographer Shane McCauley are launching the zine series “Blow Your Head”. Each volume is an 8 x 10 inch, 96 page black and white softcover printed in a limited edition of 1,500 copies.
Each volume will explore a different country and musical genre. For [the first] volume, the duo traveled through Trenchtown, visiting Tuff Gong Studios, Gee Jam Studios and Sugarman Beach, documenting the most cutting-edge music and dance with candid photographs of the players and venues.
Orders can be placed now through Picture Box.
…info via Seen.
Portraits of CARNIVAL: August 29th – September 30th @ MoCADA.
Tuesday, September 11th, 2012
For anyone who wasn’t able to make it over to the parkway this year, you can relive the party at MoCADA’s current photography exhibit. Check out the details below…
An Exhibition Curated by Shelley V. WORRELL
Portraits of CARNIVAL features the photography of well-know Caribbean photographers Ruddy Roye (Jamaica) and Ray Llanos (St. Croix). The exhibition also highlights the world famous NYC West Indian American Day Parade with archival content such as journals and vintage photographs from mas camps. The exhibition celebrates a world of color, freedom and self-expression!
The Museum of Complementary African Diasporan Arts is located in Brooklyn heights at 80 Hanson place. For directions, visit their site.
In Focus: 2 Years After The Quake.
Monday, January 23rd, 2012
More images displaying the lives of those in Haiti two years after the quake that devastated their capital. See a few images from the photo essay below…
Two years ago tomorrow, January 12, a catastrophic 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck Port-au-Prince, Haiti, leveling thousands of structures and killing hundreds of thousands of people. Haiti, already an impoverished nation, appears in many ways to have barely started recovery 24 months later, despite more than $2 billion in foreign aid. So many homes were destroyed that temporary tent cities hastily set up throughout Port-au-Prince have begun to appear permanent — more than 550,000 people still live in the dirty and dangerous encampments throughout the Haitian capital. Schools are being rebuilt, and some residents are now beginning to move out of the encampments, rediscovering a sense of community. But jobs and a sense of security remain elusive. Gathered here are recent photos from a still-suffering Haiti, two years after the earthquake.
View the complete set here: Haiti: 2 Years After the Quake – In Focus – The Atlantic.
DONATE: Through yele.org, RedCross.org, UNICEF or Habitat for Humanity International.
Two Years.
Thursday, January 12th, 2012Today marks two years since Haiti was hit with an earthquake that devastated it’s capital, Port-au-Prince. Wyclef jean, one of the founders of Yele Haiti, released the following footage documenting the immediate outcome. Check the footage below…
A documentary chronicling the experiences of Jerry “Wonda” Duplessis & Wyclef Jean, co-founders of nonprofit organization Yele Haiti, following the aftermath of the tragic 7.0 earthquake that devastated Haiti on January 12, 2010.
Additionally, GOOD Magazine has published a series of articles looking back on the events, which includes exploring the progress that’s been made since….
View the full gallery here: Two Years After the Quake, Haiti in Photos – News – GOOD.
DONATE: Through yele.org, RedCross.org, UNICEF or Habitat for Humanity International.
TONIGHT: Concrete Case – Photography of Bobbito Garcia + Kevin Couliau.
Friday, October 7th, 2011If you’re in NYC this evening, be sure to make it out to this. Should be a good one. Check out the details below…
If you’re in NYC this Friday, we suggest you make your way over to KIX NYC and check out a new photo exhibit by a friend we love Bobbito Garcia + his partner in crime Kevin Couliau. The dynamic duo have been hard at work putting the finishing touches on their new documentary on NYC pick-up basketball called “Doin’ it in the Park.” Instead they will exhibit those in 2012 in connection with the release of the film. The photos are not stills from the film but rather an exploration into Gracia and Couliau’s passion of photography in the environment they know best, the b-ball courts of NYC.
Details:
K1X NYC
359 Lafayette St.
New York, NY
Friday, October 7
6:00pm – 10:00pmAbout the Exhibit:
Kevin Couliau and Bobbito Garcia have been touring the NYC playgrounds for quite some time now. Whenever they were not playing ball or talking smack themselves, they took pictures and videos capturing the unique atmosphere that can only be found in the Mekka of basketball. Reason enough to highlight some of their works in an exhibition that will portrait the basketball spirit of NYC with passion and attention to detail like it has never been done before!
Check out more info on the show after the jump…
…info via Friends We Love.
Radcliffe Roye: Dance Hall Collection.
Thursday, September 29th, 2011
Just in case you never get to make it ‘inna de dance’…check out the photos below…

Radcliffe Roye is a Brooklyn based documentary photographer specializing in editorial and environmental portraits, photo-journalism and stock photography. A self taught photographer with over ten years of experience, Radcliffe is inspired by the raw and gritty lives of grass-roots people, especially those of his homeland of Jamaica. Radcliffe strives to tell the stories of their victories and ills by bringing their voices to matte fibre paper.
Recently, Radcliffe began experimenting with interpretative photography, preferring to allow the abstract content within the frame to dictate the voice and purpose of the image. His Elements series focuses on the bold, austere, graphic and emotionally raw imagery, that is trapped behind a diffused lens. With painterly abilities, Radcliffe uses this diffused methodology to subtly awake the subconscious and expose the isolated figure or vision painted within a rhetorical frame.
CHECK OUT MORE OF HIS WORK @ royephotography.com.
View more here: The Source – Radcliffe Roye: Dance Hall Collection.
A Photoset of Georgetown, Guyana By Nigel Durrant
Monday, August 22nd, 2011Nigel Durrant put together a nice photoset on everyday life in Guyana.
Check out the full photoset here.


Via LIFE: Inside Haitian Vodou.
Saturday, July 16th, 2011
LIFE takes their readers through a photo gallery of a religion seldom seen in it’s true light. Check out the description below…
Few religions are as misunderstood and as steeped in often-cartoonish misapprehension as Haitian Vodou. Countless people around the globe, shown images of a ceremony, might confidently say, “Yes, that is Vodou.” But very few, when pressed, could coherently discuss the core tenets of the belief.
For photographer Anthony Karen, who has traveled extensively in Haiti over the years, Vodou is at once a fascinating subject and — in a very real sense — the gateway to his vocation.
“About 13 years ago,” he told LIFE.com, “I was in a difficult, transitional point in my life. Out of nowhere, I felt Haiti calling to me. I traveled there, and saw two Vodou ceremonies in person. On the same trip, I discovered my passion for photojournalism.” Here, LIFE.com presents previously unpublished pictures of a June 2011 Haitian Vodou ceremony, along with Karen’s insights into so-called “marginalized” groups and his own work as a photographer.
Check out their full story here: Inside Haitian Vodou – Photo Gallery – LIFE.
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