SHOOTING FOR NGOs | News Photographer
Transcription
SHOOTING FOR NGOs | News Photographer
COVER STORY SHOOTING FOR NGOS NURTURING YOUR SOUL & YOUR WORLD By Alisa Booze Troetschel Many photojournalists want to use their talents as storytellers to make a difference in people’s lives. But opportunities to delve into an issue sometimes sink to the bottom of priority lists in the current “do more with less” newspaper environment, and it’s a challenge to devise a financially viable project while working as a freelancer. > > > A NEW BEGINNING. In a rehabilitation center in Uganda, a young girl who had been abducted by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA). Photograph by Stephen Shames January 2009 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER 43 IN MANILA. Photojournalist Nana Buxani during the filming of “Life On The Tracks.” Photograph by Ditsi Carolino Enrich Your Portfolio, Your Life By Alisa Booze Troetschel S Washington, DC tephen Shames, who began his career in the 1960s, has watched the number of photography essays in magazines shrink over the decades. “I’d starve to death if I had to rely on journalism to make a living right now,” said Shames, a freelance photojournalist. “Because they’re just not doing the kind of in-depth stories that I do.” In-depth stories allow time to learn about and to know subjects, a part of her work that gets freelancer Nana Buxani excited. The former newspaper shooter set a goal to explore the spread of children contracting AIDS in Cambodia. During a previous project, she met a UNICEF staff person who now works in Cambodia. Conversations with the UNICEF group will give her contacts and an understanding of the problem to guide her reporting. She knows exactly how to make her project happen. Partnering with nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and other nonprofits is a specialty for some freelancers. Shames, Buxani, and others developed ways to visually explore their interests and still make a living at it. Photojournalists like Filippo Mutani kick-start their careers by building an impressive body of work photographing for NGOs. Their images get before the eyes of the public. Their 44 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER January 2009 efforts support social justice and humanitarian causes. And, in return for fees, logistical support, contacts, or access, NGOs receive professional photography to use in fundraising and public awareness efforts. PHOTOJOURNALISM OR PUBLIC RELATIONS? The audience for a journalistic publication and an NGO is different, Shames learned. When NGOs use photography, part of their audience is the people they serve. Shames thinks that NGOs are reluctant to allow clients to be portrayed in a negative light. However, journalistic ethics mandate honest, unslanted reporting. Shames resolved the quandary for himself. He acknowledges that as a journalist, he has “a commitment to the truth.” As a college student, he protested against the war in Vietnam. “At the same time, I was a journalist,” he said. “I didn’t see that as a contradiction because I felt that the things I was photographing were also the truth.” Considering how you need to report, and understanding the expectations of the NGO, can help to avoid feelings of frustration and disappointment. Photographers may want to research the NGO and to scrutinize the project. Buxani had done projects for the World Bank. When they contacted her about filming an effort to promote development in a region, she was inclined to accept. “If you read the proposal, it sounds good,” she said. “But if you look closely,” Buxani said, “a whole, full YOUNG PRISONERS. Children packed into close quarters in the “Minor’s Quarters” jail in Visayas, Philippines, in 2002. Photograph by Nana Buxani January 2009 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER 45 CHILDREN'S’ PLIGHT. In Uganda as many as 10,000 children were called “Night Commuters” because they walked from the countryside into village centers each night to sleep in the safety of each other’s company, to prevent being kidnapped into the rebel army or sex slavery. Photograph by Stephen Shames community of people are being convinced to leave their ancestral domains to give way to this dam.” She opted not to participate. The NGO’s investment of time and money to enable the photography may affect the ability to report without restriction. Shooters who initiate open and frank conversations will lay the foundation for a positive experience. GETTING STARTED. Buxani built a business freelancing for NGOs, beginning with Oxfam in 1991. “I tend to document people who don’t have voices in the newspaper, who don’t have access to media,” she said. With NGOs as partners or clients, Buxani picked her way through sugar cane fields and walked into prisons in the Philippines to document children working and children behind bars. She recommends contacting NGOs working with an issue you’d like to cover, or in an area of the world you want to photograph. Going a step further, Shames suggests approaching several NGOs working in the region. By searching the Foundation Center Web site, he finds organizations operating where he is traveling. Multiple assignments maximize the potential return on his investment. Buxani makes pitches to organizations. She picks the brains of knowledgeable staff on the ground in order to better prepare to photograph personal projects. For those wishing to build a business in NGO photog46 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER January 2009 raphy, Shames advises beginning with smaller NGOs. He suggests initially working for free if necessary. The goal is to amass a body of work to show to larger organizations. WORKING OUT THE DEAL. Shames does pro bono work if he knows the NGO cannot afford his fee. “I need money, like everybody else,” he said. “But sometimes it’s something you really want to do and so, you just do it. After all, it is an NGO. They’re theoretically doing some public good.” However, Shames is careful how he donates his time. Larger NGOs and nonprofits are comparable to corporations in terms of budget and structure. “I wouldn’t do something for nothing for the Red Cross,” he said. “They have billions of dollars. They can afford to pay a photographer.” Working out what Buxani calls an “access deal” is a common arrangement. The NGO provides the photojournalist with access. In return, the organization gets pictures. Overseers of some environments, such as refugee camps in war zones, forbid photojournalists to enter. With the blessing of the NGO, the situation changes, as Shames experienced in Uganda with Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders). Organizational staff build relationships in communities they assist. When introduced by NGO workers, the photographer borrows upon that trust to make more intimate photographs. DOCUMENTING & TEACHING. Photojournalist Stephen Shames rode with Ugandan government soldiers on the way to a refugee camp along a road that was often controlled by rebel soldiers, in a picture taken by one of Shames’ Ugandan photography students. Photograph by Wasswa Charles “ We’re tal k i ng ab out p eopl e who gi ve th ei r l i ves fo r a go od ca use, so us u al l y you h ave col la bo ra ti ve p eop l e i n fro nt of you .” – Ste ph e n S h am es Many NGOs provide tangible assistance to offset expenses. Frequently staff on the ground speak the local language. They have transportation. Asking the NGO to provide lodging and meals is an option. While freelancer Mutani was willing to buy plane tickets from his home in Italy to Malawi and Peru, he expected the NGOs to handle logistics after his arrival. In Malawi, he stayed with an NGO staff person and ate with the family. His photography took place in one location: the delivery rooms of a nearby hospital. Mutani showed the danger, and joy, of giving birth in an impoverished nation lacking in healthcare. The setup was simple and easy, he said. Showing the challenges faced by transsexual prostitutes in Peru required more support. “I needed to have a driver, because the driving there is quite crazy,” said Mutani. “Well, it’s not that crazy compared to Italy, but it’s still crazy.” Much of his shooting happened on the streets in “a very, very bad quarter of Lima, which is a very dangerous place.” To protect Mutani and his equipment, the NGO provided a car with a driver who never left his side. And, the agency picked up the tab for lodging and meals. “They are very, very collaborative, for two reasons, I think,” Mutani said. “The first one is because they have it in their DNA.” He laughed and said, “We’re talking about people who give their lives to a good cause, so usually you have collaborative people in front of you.” The second reason is that the photography advances the NGOs’ goals. “You’re raising awareness of what they’re doing abroad, and probably you’re going to bring money to them in order to make their efforts even more efficient,” Mutani said. Shames points out that these expenses can add up to significant sums. In order to obtain the desired coverage, an NGO paid ten to twelve thousand dollars for his two flights from the States to Kenya, as well as on-the-ground expenses. Some NGOs have the budget to pay photographer’s fees. International NGOs tend to have greater capabilities than local groups, Buxani says. AGREEMENTS ABOUT RIGHTS AND USAGE. Explaining expectations in a contract is good business practice. Shames writes an informal, one-page document spelling out rights and usage of the images. The National Press Photographers AssoJanuary 2009 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER 47 LOST YOUTH. The back-breaking labor of child work- ers toiling in gold mines in the Diwalwal Davao del Norte region of Mindanao, Philippines, was documented by the photojournalist in 1996. Photograph by Nana Buxani January 2009 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER 49 BORN INTO HARDSHIP. Amayi, 18, rested shortly after delivering a baby in Malawi, in the heart of Africa, where 12,000 women give birth each year at the REBUILDING LIVES. A former rebel child soldier who is now enrolled in LEAD Uganda, an educational leadership program supported by the Stephen Shames Foundation, Ronald Okello worked with a physical therapist when he received a new prosthetic arm. Photographs by Stephen Shames A TALE OF SURVIVAL. Before he got his prosthetic arm, Ronald Okello studied inside his hut at the Pader camp for internally displaced refugees. He became a top student and a student leader after joining the LEAD Uganda program, Shames said. Okello was kidnapped when he was only nine, forced to become a rebel child soldier, saw his father hacked to death, and lost his arm in the war that’s plagued Uganda for more than 20 years. 50 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER January 2009 ciation offers an example, advice, and negotiating tips on its Web site. Frequently Shames offers nonexclusive rights to the NGO. Mutani made a similar arrangement with the groups for whom he photographed. Both photojournalists actively market the pictures on their own and through their agencies. “I always put a positive spin on it,” says Shames, sharing his response to objections NGOs sometimes express to selling the images or paying for usage. He points out that the usage fee reflects a nonprofit rate, as opposed to charging higher corporate rates. “If I’m able to sell the pictures to magazines,” Shames explains. “That’s kind of how I can afford to do it a little bit lower for you. “But the second way it works for you,” Shames adds, “is you get free publicity.” If the picture sells, the organization’s name is in the caption. “You actually should want me to put the pictures in the magazine,” he tells the NGO. Most groups see his point of view. Shames insists that NGOs only use his images for their own materials. “If you sponsor a photography exhibit, fine,” said Shames. “But you can’t give the picture to UNICEF to use in one of their photography exhibits. No. They have to come to me.” If NGOs want that freedom, he accommodates them – at a higher price. Quoting fees in the nonprofit world differs from the media world. They don’t want to contact the photographer every time they use a picture. As Shames puts it, “NGOs are not set up to be constantly bargaining about photography rights.” To make the situation more comfortable, Shames offers Bottom Hospital of Lilongwe, a large public and free maternity ward. Malawi has the second highest maternal death rate in the world (more than 1 percent), and 17 percent of the pregnant women are HIV positive. Photograph by Filippo Mutani what he calls “a two-tier price.” The lower cost is for a specific use. “I’m going to give you a price for the brochure,” Shames tells the NGO, “realizing that you’re going to have to come back to me every other time you want to use the picture. If you’re going to ever think of doing anything else with the picture besides the brochure, you ought to just go with this other price. It’s not that much more.” That figure is normally two or three times the single usage. “But you don’t ever have to come back to me,” he says, clinching his argument. He usually offers unlimited usage for three to five years. “ NG Os a re not set up to b e co nsta nt l y ba rga in i ng ab out ph otog ra phy r i ghts.” – S ha m es RECOUPING THE INVESTMENT. Sometimes the photojournalist funds the work up front, and afterwards the NGO purchases the images. Buxani remembers two projects where she could not convince organizations to cover her expenses. She footed the bill to photograph the aftermath of a typhoon. Then she sold pictures to an NGO conducting relief efforts. She financed a project about children in a Filipino prison. After seeing her work, an NGO contracted with her for more coverage. They put together an exhibit, and hired her to teach workshops to children. Picture agencies represent Buxani, Mutani, and Shames. Redux sold two bodies of NGO work, Buxani reports. Her SO DANGEROUS, DEADLY. Child workers in Philippine mines use mercury to extract gold from crushed rocks. Photograph by Nana Buxani January 2009 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER 51 ESSAYS THAT BUILD CAREERS. Photojournalist Filippo Mutani (below, in a self-portrait atop New York’s Empire State Building) is now based in Milan. In one of his projects he documented Peruvian transvestites who live around Avenida Pachacutec, the poorest and most dangerous area of Lima, such as Daniela, 20 (at left). Photographs by by Filippo Mutani Fou nd at io ns mi ght sup por t p hotog ra phy p roje cts w hich a dva nce th e goal s of an a dvo ca cy gro u p. work sells better in European markets than in the States. But, sometimes patience is required. She waited two to three years before finding buyers for her projects about children in prisons, and communities on the edge of railroad tracks. Shames emphasizes that it’s vital to think creatively about how to market your images. “The marketing is just as important as the photography,” he said. “In fact, it may even be more important in terms of making a living.” He describes Mary Ellen Mark as “a marketing genius” and Eugene Richards as “always thinking of new angles.” “If you look at the photographers who are successful,” Shames remarks, “a lot of them are really great photographers and some of them aren’t so great photographers, but the one thing that unifies them is they all really hustle. They’re thinking, where can I get these pictures? What can I do with them?” Shames published his photographs of children living in poverty in the 1980’s in a variety of venues. The Los Angeles Times, Chicago magazine, and Stern gave him assignments while he worked on the project. When he finished, he teamed up with the Children’s Defense Fund to further disseminate the pictures. Together, they published 52 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER January 2009 a book, Outside the Dream: Child Poverty in America. He reaped just a few thousand dollars in royalties. But, in the form of reviews or articles, the book appeared in over one hundred publications. Excerpts were printed in Newsweek, U.S. News & World Report, and Esquire. Shames reports he enjoyed a significant income from stock sales to magazines, television stations, films and books. He attributes the success to producing Outside the Dream. Understandably, Shames values assembling his photographs into books. They bring exposure that generates picture sales and make an effective marketing tool. He takes along a copy of a recent book to meetings with art directors and inscribes it to them. “They love it,” said Shames. His book remains in the director’s office, serving as a reminder of the talent he offers. A book also helps to sell photojournalism as fine art prints. Shames collected his photography of the Black Panther movement into a book, The Black Panthers. A gallery represents him and sells prints. “The book has become the catalogue,” he said. “People look at the book and will call up the art gallery and say, I’d like this print.” Without an accompanying book, it is difficult to persuade a museum to mount an exhibit of your images. There are two reasons, Shames says. First, the book “legitimizes the exhibit.” It lends status to the work. The second reason is about profit, because the museum will sell the book in their shop. FINANCING THE PROJECT. Buxani lives simply in order to do the work she values. Photographing motion pictures, teaching photography workshops, and making illustrations augment her income. Freedom and flexibility are a priority for Shames. To gain these, he decreases his business overhead. This allows him to photograph nonpaying stories for several months. “One of the ways I do that is I try to get foundation grants,” he says. “I find advocacy groups that share my interest in that issue and we put in a grant together.” Shames has received numerous grants from the Annie E. Casey, Robert Wood Johnson, and Ford Foundations. These foundations invested in the work of the NGO. Keep the end result in mind when applying for grant money, he advises. “The grants that I get for my photography projects are not photo grants,” Shames explained. “Ford wasn’t doing it to benefit me. They were doing it to benefit the advocacy group, who were using my pictures to grow, who were using my pictures to try and change public policy.” Shames credits Ken Light, a professor of photojournalism at the University of California at Berkeley, for sharing the idea with him that foundations might support photography projects which advance the goals of an advocacy group. Occasionally Shames approaches a corporation to fund a project. He presents it as a public relations initiative. This is appropriate when the corporation makes significant sales in the country where the project is, or employs many workers there. Working with NGOs can help photojournalists pursue the projects they yearn to do. At the same time, they can derive the satisfaction of helping to relieve pain, right injustice, and restore peace. “I get energized listening to peoples’ stories,” Buxani says. “Ordinary people, people who have done amazing community work but their stories never get told or photographed.” ■ – AlisaBoozeTroetschel@hotmail.com January 2009 NEWSPHOTOGRAPHER 53