Currently viewing the category: "Visual Journalism"

The land enclosed is no longer a presence, as if what was displaced or destroyed at these sites no longer matters. Memory has been traded for development. What will be erected with a strict belief that the future is the only concern?

Continue Reading

We found this video of 2011 new year’s night in Manila at the Emergency Room by Filipino photographer Luis Liwanag intriguing to say the least. Fascinating display of revelry, mishaps and brawls as he puts it. Warning: Graphic content.

Continue Reading

We previously featured Japanese photographer Soichiro Koriyama’s Photo Essay: Vanishing Village on a dairy farming community affected by the Fukushima nuclear incident. Here is a video extension of Soichiro’s work.

Continue Reading

Liu Bolin the invisible artist/photographer from China produces quite amazing photographs. Now you see him, now you don’t, Bolin spends about 10 hours shooting each photograph where he paints himself with the aid of assistants to blend into his landscape environment. Here are a few videos of Bolin and his work.

Continue Reading

A short video vignette of the Worker’s Party Rally at Bedok Stadium on the eve of Saturday, 30th April 2011. The Singapore General Elections 2011 is the most contested elections in the country since independence.

Continue Reading

A roundup of some of the best independent photo essay coverage of the Singapore General Elections 2011 –  the most contested elections in the country since independence. This list will be updated with new essays as they become available online.

Continue Reading

In this Invisible Interview we catch up with John Clang, arguably one of Singapore’s most successful photographers, and recent recipient of the President’s Design Award Singapore. John, or just Clang as most would recognise, is represented by The Collective Shift in New York. His work is personal, intimate and acclaimed – some like it, some [...]

Continue Reading

Thaipusam is one of the most important festival events in the Tamil Hindu calendar, particularly in the Southeast Asian region. The word Thaipusam is derived from the month name Thai (January/February) and Pusam, which refers to a star that is at its highest point during the festival.

Continue Reading