Everyday Africa

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Everyday Africa

The common media image of the African continent is one of extremes - but how can we identify the extremes without first establishing the norms? Everyday Africa is a collection of daily life images from across the continent, focusing on the mundane and the familiar. As journalists who have lived or spent significant amounts of time on the continent, we find the extreme not nearly as prevalent as the everyday.

www.everydayafricaproject.com
Find us on Instagram, @everydayafrica
Contact us: everydayafrica@gmail.com

Conceived by Peter DiCampo and Austin Merrill, the project has grown to include work from the following contributors:

Glenna Gordon
Jane Hahn
Idil Ibrahim
Shannon Jensen
Krisanne Johnson and My Future, My Voice, a class that teaches photography to Swaziland teenagers
Lindsay Mackenzie
Holly Pickett
Charlie Shoemaker
Nichole Sobecki
Laura El-Tantawy

With editorial assistance by Stephen Mayes / VII Photo Agency and Sara Terry / The Aftermath Project.

This project was initially conceived during a trip to Ivory Coast that was funded by a grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

Featured in:
Around the World With Christiane Amanpour (ABC News / Yahoo! News)
The New Yorker Photo Booth
The New York Times Lens Blog
Bloomberg Businessweek
Salon
Guernica

From a blog post by Peter on our Pulitzer Center project page:

It begins on an elevator, as we ascend through a government building to pick up our press passes. I suppose part of the beauty of photographing with a phone is that you can start working before you’re issued a press pass.

For each project I photograph, there is always one image that makes everything click in my brain; one image that makes me realize what the story or theme is. In this case, the epiphany was that there need not always be a theme. Often my work as a photojournalist seems surprisingly, even dangerously, predetermined. We know the story we have been sent to cover, and we edit ourselves to tell that story even as we shoot. In this case, for example, I was in Ivory Coast to investigate a conflict I had witnessed the tail end of one year before – and the cocoa trade that feeds it, and uncertain steps being taken to resolve it. Subconsciously or not, I looked for photos that told that story.

And so it seemed that the other photos I was making simultaneously – on a silly phone with a silly “app” – began to feel more honest in their experiential nature. Sometimes we shoot without a theme. I notice the man on the elevator, the symmetry of the men around him and their reflections, the row of lights above his head. The picture is interesting in its mundane-ness, and therein lies the truth. Africa can be the place of extremes that we in the West see so often. Inundated with images of incredible poverty; occasionally we also see vast wealth. But Africa can be familiar. It can also, thankfully, be boring.

In this context, everything becomes important. The blur of a man in a bookstore, the row of young men lined up to read the daily paper. One morning, with an egg sandwich in one hand and a phone in the other, I snap a photo of a young Guinean girl walking through curtains. Her parents own the breakfast joint we frequent. Two hours and ten minutes later, a man wipes the snot from a young boy’s face. I can’t understand his language but I know what is being said. “This visitor is photographing you. Look your best.”

As we line up waiting for the UN to return the refugees to their homes, I’m torn. Which to photograph, the sad faces peering through the windows – so reminiscent of the forlorn images I’ve come to expect from this corner from the world – or the men standing, laughing, poring over DVDs for sale, deciding which Hollywood film to spend their money on. Which shoot-em-up blockbuster should be the first that they watch after they get back to their village and rebuild their homes, that they will purchase with the UN’s readjustment allowance?

It’s jarring. Sometimes I don’t think we let it jar us enough. We find the palatable in these situations. Refugees, we think, should be heavy with the terrible burden of all they’ve seen, weary with the miles they’ve walked to flee this place – not smiling and posing with the silly foreigner who appears with a camera.

I’m wandering in a village that was, unlike the others, only recently destroyed. Burning through rolls of film to make evidence that the conflict may not yet be over – and then four young men come by laughing, and they stand with their arms crossed in the shade of a tree, and they make a camera motion with their hands. Snap snap snap, and later I scrawl into a notebook, ‘we may never understand this place.’

I’m wandering in a shopping mall, a plantation, a border crossing, a harbor, an airport terminal. As a photographer, it seems to exist all for me to point at and snap. But it’s not for me. It’s Africa, everyday.

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  • The Basilica of Our Lady of Peace, the largest #church in the world. Yamoussoukro, #IvoryCoast. March 2012. Photo by Austin. #bike #bicycle #catholic (Taken with Instagram)

    The Basilica of Our Lady of Peace, the largest #church in the world. Yamoussoukro, #IvoryCoast. March 2012. Photo by Austin. #bike #bicycle #catholic (Taken with Instagram)

    Tagged: catholic bike bicycle ivorycoast church

    Posted on October 10, 2012 with 27 notes

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