Archive for the 'Photojournalism' Category

Doing good: Fighting Cancer, Protecting the Environment

  We just turned in our final tally for the money we raised in the past few months for the LIVESTRONG Foundation.  About $7,000 was donated by individuals and by our own contributions in only 4 months towards the cause against cancer.  How cool is that?  That’s real money, from real people: real brides and grooms, real commercial clients, real editorial clients and wonderful friends who were inspired by the issue and wanted to help.  Thank you!

Bowdoin College Brian Wedge One Percent For The Planet

  Very soon, you’ll be seeing another logo displayed near ours… one that indicates our recent membership in a fantastic organization called 1% For The Planet.  We’re one of the very first companies in Maine, and the very first photographer in this state to make this commitment.  By joining, we’re dedicating 1% of our entire sales before ANY deductions are taken (not just 1% of our profit), to be donated to organizations who are helping protect and improve our natural environment.

  I was so happy to hear that my Alma Mater, Bowdoin College, is awarding an honorary degree today to Yvon Chouinard… an icon of responsible businesses, the founder of Patagonia Clothing Company and one of the creators of 1% for the planet.  I’m very proud of Bowdoin and their commitment to The Common Good.

Yvon Chouinard

  Here’s a great short video on Chouinard and 1% for the planet: Brian Wedge Yvon Chouinard

  We’re proud to be looking beyond the photos we create to support the people and causes we believe in.  And we’re just getting started.  We hope other companies will follow our lead, and learn as we have that making commitments to the common good are a necessary and responsible business decision!

  Contributing to our community is one of our most important core values… and though our clients love the beautiful images we create, we also know that it “matters” HOW we do business.  I’m just thrilled that our business is growing by leaps and bounds every month… and that we’re staying committed to the causes that mean so much to us.

  What goes around comes around.  Thanks for YOUR support!

 

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Protest: Memorial Day Veterans

  Last week I had the honor of receiving an assignment from a national magazine to photograph two Veterans for an article on honoring the American Flag.  Charles Bennett and Travis Hill peacefully protested the display of the American Flag on the floor of a hallway in a university.  Hundreds of American Flags were laid on the floor of the University’s Student Center as part of a graduate student’s experiment to see who would walk on, or around the flag.

American Flag Veterans

  Mr. Bennett, Travis Hill and numerous other members of the greater university community protested the use of the flag in this way.  At first they picked up the flags, but were told that they were not allowed to do that.  As a last resort, they peacefully stood in front of one of the American Flags, arms folded, ensuring that at least One American Flag did not get walked on.

American Legion Photos

  I was incredibly impressed by these guys.  No matter where we all stand on this war, this administration or even the use of the American Flag… I admire people who stand up for what they believe in, and do it in a compassionate and peaceful manner.  During the photo shoot, I learned that they both had gone to war for this country, putting their own lives in jeopardy to protect our freedoms.  The flag is a symbol of that sacrifice and of their fellow soldiers who never returned home.  

  It was an incredible reminder for me that I could never be enjoying my family this Memorial Day without the tradition of sacrifice embodied by these two guys.  To all those families out there who have made that sacrifice… thank you!

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We’re in the movies! Look out Hollywood!

Though often we feel like we’re in the movies (covering the bizarre, beautiful and always interesting)… I was as surprised as anyone to get the call from a Hollywood movie studio. We still get the occasional residual checks from Christine’s stuntwoman days… so I figured it must be for her, but later we realized that there’s a new movie being filmed in Philadelphia called TENURE (starring Luke Wilson).

Wendameen Schooner Wheel

Anyway, one of their main characters is obsessed with sailing in Maine… and they saw some of my work in a few magazines and thought it would be a great fit. How cool is that? I think it’s as close as I’ll ever get to being in the movies… so look for these images in a few months when the movie premieres!

Climbing The Bowsprit

 

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A vision of caregiving: One Mother’s Journey

  The following isn’t the most “fun” post I’ve made, but something that I’ve passed around privately to fellow caregivers, survivors and medical-types.  The feedback has been that the images are important and responsible (they also won the Pulitzer Prize)… so with the warning that they are not pleasant, I hope you find that they might spark a moment of reflection and appreciation!

  After a few weeks of sharing perspectives on everything from marathons to cancer through the medium of  photography, I’ve had an overwhelming response from folks who have been touched by this concept of “Survivor” and “Caregiver.”  

 

  Survivors overcome obstacles like disease, hardship and challenge… and Caregivers are synonymous with medical technicians, providers and those that clean up the “messiness” of disease and hardship.

  Since my sister was diagnosed with cancer I’ve shifted my definitions in very real and dramatic ways.  First and foremost, I’ve learned that survivors sometimes don’t actually survive.  I’ve met dozens of inspiring survivors who never fully overcome their diseases.  ”Survivor” is not a label just for those who are victorious.

  I’ve also learned that survivors include those family members and friends touched by the challenge of cancer… and those same Survivors are quite often the primary Caregivers.

  It’s an incredibly difficult dual role to play.  To have the discipline of an objective practitioner, while bearing the burden of anguish, sadness or just the “real life” stress of financial and logistical challenges is often overwhelming.  

  To add to our visual library of both Survivors and Caregivers, I’ve included an incredible collection from The Sacramento Bee’s photographer Renee Byer.  Her photography chronicles the journey of one single mother caring for her son and his cancerous stomach tumor.  The duality of the mother’s role is obvious… first Caregiver, Survivor and then back again.  It’s an impossible task, and one that we can barely comprehend.

  As trained medical professionals, documentary photojournalists and associate supporters of those on the front lines, it’s important to remember that who we focus on depends on the specific moment we engage them.  Understanding the plurality of each character adds depth and complexity to every scene.  

  It’s an important subtlety that we all struggle to balance: we all know the importance of “instinct” and “anticipation” as caregivers and journalists… but these images remind me of how important it is to stay in the moment, assume nothing and to take every event for the uniqueness that it is.

  With that said, Renee Byer does a fantastic job capturing one mother’s journey and challenges me to rethink some of the assumptions I make when encountering an “obvious” scene to be documented.  With depth and sensitivity, Renee illuminates the fact that the Caregiver is also the Survivor… and the roles held by one person can shift without notice.

  Here is the complete story including narrative… amazing stuff. (click NEXT to see each photo)

 

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