Wednesday, February 13, 2019

"Where Love Is Illegal" Photo series

I follow the New Yorker on Instagram and they posted a blurb about a the photographs in Robin Hammond's "Where Love Is Illegal" photo series. The photos document anti-gay discrimination around the world. The subjects posted as they wanted to be seen, and most described the ways in which they were attacked. This is part of a larger online project that documents "LGBTI stories of discrimination and survival from around the world."

As technology and social media has growth as a tool for solidarity and bringing people together, this photo series spotlights the relationship between activism, oppression, and solidarity. I found the disjuncture between the photos and the stories behind them to be very thought-provoking for me, and perhaps for others as well.

The photographs are currently on display at the Bronx Documentary Center.

https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/where-love-is-illegal-the-photographer-who-collects-stories-of-lgbti-discrimination-across-the-world

1 comment:

  1. Thank you for sharing this! I found the photos very striking and personal while also distant. The photographs Hammond took were beautiful but what I found most breathtaking was the photo that the article references to, the selfie of Faried. I thought posed yet also casualness of the photo very disturbing. The other photos that the article posts are so much more posed and serious in a way. I also really like the photo of the person praying with the rosary (?). I wondered what the religious context of the photo was; are they praying as a way to find solace and hope? are they tackling with their religious views and their identity and how they might conflict? are they thinking about both of these things? neither? I don't know!

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

Tom of Finland House

Last weekend, I went to an art gallery opening at the Tom of Finland House in LA. The house has been around for a long time and has been a...