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Arts + Entertainment
What is a Picture Worth?
by
Cara Davis
My mother has no fewer than 40 photographs of my daughter—her only grandchild—on display in her home. When you walk into her three-bedroom, ranch-style home, there is little question who her heart orbits around. A mixture of candid snapshots and professional studio portraits pepper the walls, shelves and refrigerator, often rotating according to the seasons.
It's often said a picture is worth a thousand words, but to her, one word is worth a thousand pictures: Madilyn.
I cannot imagine what it must be like for many people who never have pictures taken–formally or informally. But for most, it's a luxury ill afforded when you're struggling to put food on the table or maintain a roof over your head.
Thankfully, there's a growing movement of photographers worldwide seeking to change that.
Help-Portrait
is a global event each December when photographers, stylists and other volunteers come together to give—instead of take—photos. Celebrity photographer
Jeremy Cowart
founded the group as a way to encourage the photography community to give back.
The premise is simple:
1. Find someone in need.
2. Take their portrait.
3. Print their portrait.
4. Deliver it to them.
This group sets up backdrops, lights and makeup stations in homeless shelters, hospitals and poverty-stricken areas to give portraits to those who would otherwise never have them. They also provide a hot meal, clothes, shoes and a safe place for kids to play for the day. In only two events over the past two years, the group has logged 101,596 photos in 54 countries.
At these events, the portrait becomes more than a representation of a person's likeness and more than a keepsake. It becomes the receipt for an exchange between individuals where the currency is dignity, courage, love and hope.
“Poverty steals a lot of things, like your home and car and food, but it also steals something on the inside,” Annie Downs, Help-Portrait’s Events Coordinator said. “Help-Portrait feeds that something on the inside.”
For many subjects, this photograph may symbolize the start of a new life, a celebration of sobriety, the first time they’ve ever felt beautiful or the only family photo that now exists. Phillip Jackovich, a Help-Portrait subject, reflected: “This portrait represents where I’m going, not where I’ve been.”
For many photographers, this experience may be the most fulfilling of their career to date. They may walk away with altered perspectives and new friends. Cowart says the event crosses cultural borders on one side of the camera and competitive borders on the other.
When people come together to work toward the common good, something magical and tangible is produced. It may look like picture, but it's often worth more than a thousand words.
So what is a picture worth?
Ask Heather’s parents. Photographer Jean Labelle made beautiful portraits of the 11-year-old suffering with a terminal illness in Ottawa, Ontario just weeks before she passed away in 2009.
Ask photographer Kelli Trontel. Kelli was part of the initial Help-Portrait test event in Nashville, TN and organized her own event in Montana after moving there in 2010. “I was overwhelmed by the response from the photographers whom I had never met, the amount of volunteers who showed up and the heart of the people here in the town that I had only lived in for about three months. We planned the Help-Portrait event in just 30 days and the day itself was incredible.”
The new community Kelli found herself surrounded by became an unexpected blessing when her sister died. “The emails and phone calls from the photographers who had heard of the news meant so much to me. Help-Portrait is about so much more than you think and it will forever change your life.”
Linda, from Northwest Arkansas, took photos of a pregnant teen, making her feel “movie-star” beautiful. “I have prayed that one day I would find something to be passionate about, something that made me feel joy, something that would make me work hard for it. I have found that in photography,” Linda said.
Similarly, Kwame Reed, a photographer in Brentwood, Calif., said after participating, “Today was the one of the best days I have had as a photographer and as a human being.”
Jeremy Cowart has been so moved by the stories emerging from these events that he’s encouraging subjects to tell their stories in their own words on their photographs on this year’s event being held Dec. 10. In a test event on Skid Row on a recent Sunday, Cowart allowed his subjects to write anything they wanted on their photographs.
The results speak for themselves.
If you are interested in serving with Help-Portrait, please
click here
.
Why, as follower's of Jesus, should we value photography?
What are some other non-traditional ways to restore human dignity?
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Comments
Beth Bruno
Love these questions! As a photographer, follower of Jesus, and pursuer of social justice, I have also been dreaming of ways of reclaiming inherent worth in those who have been marginalized. A few years ago, I founded a nonprofit that seeks to do just this (
www.afacetoreframe.org
). I believe that real transformation starts with issues of identity. When you have a person who has been chronically marginalized, as many "poor" people are, you have broken dignity. Furthermore, these very people are often the subjects of images that represent the issue they face (poverty, malaria, HIV/AIDS, etc.). I'm NOT saying Help Portrait does this! But often, we see the face of the poor without ever knowing their name, their story, their hopes. Our organization empowers these very people to become the authors of the images that represent their lives, by taking the photographs themselves, ultimately reframing them and their communities with dignity.
Jeff Nelson
Photography is a creative expression that goes beyond what mere words can artfully be articulated and it often times penetrates deeper into our hearts and minds; it can lead us in the process of “understanding” complex issues simply by viewing a striking image. We can be inspired by them and encouraged, we can be taught by them and remembered because of them. IF "understanding" goes hand in hand with wisdom and if we as Christians consider understanding more valuable than silver and gold, then it’s easy to see the real value of photography. Photography helps us to gain a better understanding of people around the world and the daily challenges they face and because of that I can not only see the value of photography for followers of Christ, I can understand it.
Gaining knowledge is about imprinting data to our brains, the most effective way to disseminate that knowledge is to have" understanding" about who you want to share that information with, I see photography a lot like that. I can simply imprint an image on my brain and have it for myself, yet by simply putting a camera in between my brain and the image I can record it for some one else to see. It is said its much better to give than to receive but in order to give I must first receive So I see capturing images is more about giving and sharing and what we do receive from it is a deeper understanding of the people around us and as a follower of Jesus I see real value in that.
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