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Street carnival, Inhambane, Mozambique.

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Street Portraiture | National Geographic | BodyArt

Flickr Gallery: The Power of Documentary Portraiture

Tags:   Mozambique Inhambane Africa bacchanal African Afrique carnival iPhone street documentary portrait portraiture people travel faces ethnic indigenous tradition aesthetics boy bodyart painted bodies body painting faces of africa carnaval fashion DavidSchweitzer DocumentaryPhotography StreetPhotography HumanInterest VisualAnthropology PhotoJournalism DocumentaryPortrait StreetPortrait

N 163 B 25.9K C 114 E Feb 1, 1996 F Mar 27, 2014
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Central Highlands, Grand Valley of the Balim River, West Papua, (Indonesia). High resolution Noritsu Koki QSS digital film scan, shot with a compact semi-automatic Pentax Zoom 35mm Point and Shoot Film Camera, circa 1996.

Tags:   Vanishing Cultures Melanesia West Papua Irian Jaya Grand Valley Balim River central highlands Indonesia Dani elder indigenous tribe tribal culture “body art” “ethnic jewellry” body street documentary photojournalism portrait context portraiture Dugum Dani “Grand Valley” Balim Valley highlands ethnic jewellery” travel gaze Bodyart DavidSchweitzer HumanInterest VisualAnthropology people DocumentaryPortrait StreetPortrait DocumentaryPhotography StreetPhotography film analog asia

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A rider on a golden Palomino appeared like a mirage seemingly out of nowhere during a photoshoot at Spanish Banks after a huge alpine snow snowstorm - a surreal Marlboro moment.

The sea-to-sky corridor in the backdrop extends from from the Straight of Georgia and the low-runoff fjord of Howe Sound to the snow-covered peaks and ice fields of the iconic Tantalus Range. The mountain corridor leads to a world-class bouldering and rock-climbing haven in Squamish, and ultimately to Whistler's spectacular alpine sanctuary and dream destination for riders and skiers.

© All rights reserved. expl#30

Tags:   explore fjord coast snow clouds mountains peaks layers outdoor sea serene landscape icefields Cowboy Sea-to-sky alpine marlboro man horseback Vancouver Whistler Squamish Coastline horse rider Howe Sound Straight of Georgia British Columbia Canada Atkinson Lighthouse Burrard Inlet Tantalus Range Spanish Banks adventure Harbour water Beach sky Bowen Island street photography” DavidSchweitzer DocumentaryPhotography StreetPhotography HumanInterest VisualAnthropology PhotoJournalism people DocumentaryPortrait StreetPortrait Palomino

N 639 B 38.6K C 43 E Jun 1, 1976 F Nov 13, 2020
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Peul (Fulani, Fulbe, Fula) herdsmen with traditional wide-brimmed fibre-and-leather conical hats meet at the weekly market in front of Djenné's Great Mosque. A colourful multiethnic gathering of herders and traders converges at the mosque from the surrounding regions and fertile flood plains of the Niger River inland delta, central Mali. Digital film scan, Asahi Pentax Spotmatic, shot directly under the noonday sun, circa 1976.

The Great Mosque of Djenné towers over the market in a seemingly apocalyptic backdrop on this day. The mosque is considered the world’s largest adobe building and one of the greatest achievements of Sudano-Sahelian architecture, unique to the semi-arid Sahel zone that stretches across northern Africa just south of an encroaching Sahara.

These Peul herdsmen are likely from the class of “free nobles” (mostly nomadic herders, religious and political leaders, some tradesmen and sedentary cultivators) at the top of a highly stratified caste-based Peul society.

Ethnographers distinguish this class from lower-tiered occupational groups or “castes” (griot story tellers and song-praisers, artisans, blacksmiths, potters, woodworkers, dress makers) and descendants of slaves (labourers, brick makers, house builders).

~~~
Postrscript - The enchanting Arabian Nights imagery emanating out of this ancient marketplace at the time if this photo shoot (1976) is reminiscent of a seemingly bygone Sahelian era devoid of smartphones, credit cards and packaged safari tours.

Nowadays, nascent tourism is on hold and easy access to markets, pastures and farmlands is hampered as ethnic strife and inter-communal violence continue to erupt under a fragile or failed Malian state with a troubled history of military coups.

The current military junta relies on mercenaries from the private Russian-backed Wagner Group for its security needs, coinciding with the recent French withdrawal of troops from the region. By providing protection to the Malian military regime, the Moscow-centered paramilitary group has increased its power and access to Mali's scarce natural resources.

In 2018, Human Rights Watch reported that the Mopti region of central Mali has become an epicentre of inter-rethnic conflict, fuelled by a steady escalation of violence by armed Islamist groups largely allied with Al Qaeda’s advance from the north since 2015.

Recruitment to the militant Islamist movement from Peul pastoral herding communities has inflamed tensions within sedentary agrarian communities (Bambara, Dogon, Tellem, Bozo and others) who rely on access to agricultural lands for their livelihood.

Predominantly Muslim but opposing ethnic self-defence militias on both sides have been formed for the protection of their own respective communities. This has contributed to a continuous cycle of violent attacks and reprisals touching villages and hamlets, pastures and farmlands, and some marketplaces.

While communal tensions are profoundly connected to a larger ethnopolitical conflict unfolding in northern Mali, chronic insecurities around the ancient town of Djenné and in the broader central regions of Mali are exacerbated by longstanding indigenous concerns over a struggle for scarce natural resources - agricultural land for settled farmers versus water and grazing land for semi-nomadic Peul herdsmen.

Efforts at mediation in the area around Djenné and the grand mosque include a Humanitarian Agreement specifically among Bambara and Bozo farmers, Dogan "hunters" protecting farmers' interests and Peul herders, all committed to guaranteeing the freedom of movement of people, goods and livestock in the "Circle of Djenné" situated in the Mopti region of central Mali.

© All rights to these photos and descriptions are reserved. Any use of this work requires my prior written permission. explore#19

Social Documentary | Documentary Portraiture | Lonely Planet | National Geographic

Tags:   Djenne mosque Niger river Peul Fulani Africa Afrique Mali Sahel tribe tribal tradition indigenous ethnic african adobe houses backstreets delta Sudano-Sahelian architecture herder market Fulbe Fula DavidSchweitzer DocumentaryPhotography StreetPhotography HumanInterest VisualAnthropology PhotoJournalism people faces noblemen herdsmen herders Explore black&white monochrome film analog Nobleman unescoworldheritagesite portrait travel outdoor DocumentaryPortrait StreetPortrait landscape

N 597 B 45.6K C 171 E Jul 1, 2012 F Feb 28, 2021
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Tuareg from Gao, northern Mali, West Africa.

© All rights reserved. expl#85

Street Portraiture | Social Documentary | Lonely Planet

Tags:   explore Tuareg man Gao Mali Africa Sahel Sahara Documentary Portraiture tribal Human Interest tribe rebels fighters Azawad Afrique portrait indigenous Faces of Africa West Africa travel gaze outdoor documentary DocumentaryPhotography StreetPhotography VisualAnthropology PhotoJournalism people DocumentaryPortrait StreetPortrait VanishingCultures analog film Touareg


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