Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Day one of Street Fashion






Since I don't know how to work blogger properly, I'm going to include the composite images in a separate entry. 

In other news: 
I looked up several photojournalists yesterday, and found one I fell in love with. 
Lauren Greenfield is amazing. She shoots female subjects in very common situations, but she shows the irony in why these situations are at all common. Things like little girls getting manicures and their mothers thinking it's totally fine to take their 4 year old to a spa on a regular basis, or images of a woman being weighed in at 84 lbs, bones protruding everywhere and still feeling unattractively overweight, within an eating disorder clinic. Eating disorders, overindulgence, how much money is affecting a younger and younger demographic, plastic surgery - I think what she's really trying to tell us is that girls in society these days are growing up far too quickly and society turns a blind eye to it. Because of the media and things like that, little girls are acting like teenagers, and teenagers are acting like women in their 30s, and there are actually mothers encouraging behavior like that. Her work is intense and at times heartbreaking, but above all, eye-opening. I attempted to get the dvd of her HBO documentary special called THIN, about the girls with eating disorders, but the Canterbury Public Library isn't the most helpful library of all time, to put it nicely. They didn't have a single thing on Greenfield, so I'm left with the internet and youtube. 

I also found a really interesting side story to picture-perfect Canterbury, and I have all intentions of looking more into it: the homeless situation. I took a picture today, basically on a whim when I first set out for the day, and while I edited it, I realized it had some real impact. I think I want to do a series of them, since there's more to the story, and Canterbury does everything it can to keep their homeless and the homeless situation swept under the rug, rather than dealing with it; it's highly ignored, and I want to see how much I can exploit it before leaving the country.

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