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With warm regards,

Amit Bhatt
Skype: amitbhattindia
Windows Live Messenger: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Mob: +91 935-006-3109

"The difficult we do today, the impossible takes little longer"

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Sameer 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, February 09, 2007 7:25 PM
Subject: [SayEverything] Blind photographers turn to cameras to share their work



International Herald Tribune
Thursday, February 08, 2007

Blind photographers turn to cameras to share their world

By The Associated Press

TEL AVIV, Israel: Reaching above her dark glasses, Riki Fritsh held a 
compact camera to her forehead and snapped away at a group of passengers 
boarding
a bus.

Most of the travelers were caught off guard by the camera's flash. But they 
were even more surprised to learn that Fritsh is blind.

Fritsh is one of nine blind photographers featured in an exhibition at the 
Bezalel Academy of Art and Design at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

"When people see the photos, they are proud of me," said Fritsh, 50, who has 
been completely blind since birth. "They can't believe that I took these 
pictures."

Organizers said one of their goals is to let visitors see what it's like to 
be blind.

"When we follow the things that they decide to shoot, it reveals their world 
to us," said Iris Shinar, one of the group's instructors.

Some of the photos in the exhibit are out of focus. Some don't show the 
subjects' faces, but all provide candid glimpses into the lives of the 
photographers.

One photo shows a darkened apartment and another shows the blurry image of 
the artist in an ornate mirror. A sultry woman - the girlfriend of one of 
the
photographers - lounges on a couch. A 90-year-old grandmother takes a nap in 
the afternoon sun.

An annual exhibit of blind photographers in Tokyo inspired Shinar and fellow 
photographer Kfir Sivan to start their own program in Israel. They hope 
similar
programs will start in other countries as well.

Several groups exist worldwide for partially blind and otherwise disabled 
photographers, but completely blind photography is still quite rare, said 
Shirley
Britton of the Disabled Photographers Society in the United Kingdom.

"There seems to be a lot of people who are partially sighted," Britton said. 
"But I don't know if a completely blind person could really do photography."

Shinar and Sivan weren't sure how it would work either. Before the class 
started, they experimented by blindfolding themselves and taking pictures to 
see
what would work. They discovered that holding the camera to the forehead, 
like a third eye, was the best way to stabilize and aim the camera.

They found volunteer participants from the Herzliya Center for the Blind, 
near Tel Aviv, and started teaching. Since last March, they have been 
teaching
the group on a volunteer basis, providing the students with cameras, film 
and other supplies. The classes covered composition, fundamentals, and a 
history
of photography, among other subjects. The results impressed even the 
instructors.

"Every week Riki brings me a roll and in every roll there are winning 
shots," Shinar said.

Since she started photographing people on her bus route Fritsh, 50, has 
become well-known and several people call out to her by name as they board. 
One
bus passenger even asked her to be the official photographer for a party at 
local nursing home.

"At first, it was a bit odd," said Shira Yehzkia, an 18-year-old passenger 
whose grandfather is also blind. "But I get really excited to see blind 
people
do things that are not regular for them."

While some might be skeptical that a blind person can create visual art, 
professor Gerald Pryor, head of the photography department at New York 
University,
said the concept makes sense.

"They see the world with their bodies," Pryor said. "They sense the world in 
a different way, and they can manifest that world in a photograph."

The art, however, doesn't just share the artists' world, Shinar said, it 
also helps the artists themselves connect to the people around them.

Shinar said some students like to document their travels and activities for 
their grandchildren. One woman photographed her Passover feast preparations
for more than 30 family members.

The exhibit closed on Tuesday after a three-week run that attracted crowds 
of more than 400 people. Shinar said the class will continue.

"We can't stop now," she said. "We are like family."

On the Net:
The photos can still be viewed online at
http://www.theblindphotographer.com.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/02/09/africa/ME-GEN-Israel-Blind-Photographers.php

Regards
Sameer Latey
Mumbai, India
Mob. 9867414004 



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