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Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Miami Photo Salon: International Festival of Photography & Fine Art Photo Related Art
Saturday, November 8, 2014
A Dance with Daddy: Fathers at Miami Federal Detention Center Hold Dance
Omar Outten dances with his daughter at the Federal Detention Center Miami. |
BY AUDRA D.S. BURCH
ABURCH@MIAMIHERALD.COM
PHOTOS BY AL DIAZ
Inmate Ernest Williams, serving a 41-month drug sentence, had long stopped asking his family — a wife and five children — to come see him at the Federal Detention Center Miami. The visits, he says, left him too chastened and hurt, a stark reminder of his loss of freedom.
ABURCH@MIAMIHERALD.COM
PHOTOS BY AL DIAZ
Inmate Ernest Williams, serving a 41-month drug sentence, had long stopped asking his family — a wife and five children — to come see him at the Federal Detention Center Miami. The visits, he says, left him too chastened and hurt, a stark reminder of his loss of freedom.
So when a staffer told him about the Federal
Bureau of Prisons’ plan to host a first-ever dance allowing inmates to spend an
afternoon with their daughters, Williams said no, instead returning to the
predictable routine of his kitchen detail.
Weeks later, Williams says, he had a dream
while sleeping in his cell, an unclouded vision of him dancing with his three
daughters. The next day, he said yes.
On Tuesday, Williams moved beyond all the
emptiness and guilt, trading a khaki jumpsuit for a light gray suit, lavender
print tie and black shoes — and danced with his 9-year-old twin girls and
13-year-old daughter for a few precious moments at the detention center, a
high-rise administrative facility on Northeast Fourth Street. “I haven’t seen
my girls in months, I could not believe how much they have grown,” said
Williams, 37, convicted of intent to sell crack cocaine. “I was so happy to see
them but so sad that I will not be able to leave with them. I am here instead
of being outside with my family because of the choices I made.”
Read More HERE:
Xzavion Steadman checks his tie before seeing his daughter at the Federal Detention Center Miami. |
Omar Outten straightens the cuffs on his pants as he waits to see his daughter. |
Xzavion Steadman greets his daughter at the Federal Detention Center Miami. (Some of the faces of the subjects have been blurred to prevent identification, as agreed upon with prison authorities.) |
Inmate Santeli Martinez dances with his daughters visiting him in prison. |
Inmate Santeli Martinez walks with his daughter visiting him in prison. |
Omar Outten performs for his daughter with fellow inmates to the song My Girl by the Temptations. |
Inmate Omar Outten plays with his daughter while she visits him in federal prison. |
Friday, November 7, 2014
WINNERS ANNOUNCED: Al’s Think Tank Photo Halloween Contest 2014
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First Place Photo by Rick McCawley |
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Second Place Photo by Will Dickey |
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Third Place Photo by Wilfredo Lee |
Total mayhem except for the momentary pause caused by the repulsive adorableness of Weegee the angel dog by third place winner Wilfredo Lee of the Associated Press.
First Place Wins:
Think Tank Photo Retrospective50 in Blue Slate $249.75
3 Legged Thing X5 Frank Evolution 2 Carbon Fiber Tripod System - AirHed 2 in Blue $619
Second Place Wins:
Think Tank Photo CityWalker 20 in Blue $144.75
Third Place Wins:
Think Tank Photo DigitalHolster 20 $69.75
Peak Design Leash and Cuff $49.95
Some of the other photos receiving votes by the judges are seen below.
The Judges:
Charles Trainor Jr. Miami Herald
Emily Michot Miami Herald
Jose Iglesias El Nuevo Herald
Cindy Seip Photographer
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Sunday, November 2, 2014
Florida Day of the Dead Continues Sunday in Fort Lauderdale
Florida Day of the Dead Celebration in Fort Lauderdale
Click Here for more information: http://www.dayofthedeadflorida.com
Monday, October 27, 2014
Al Diaz on Faculty of Atlanta Photojournalism Seminar 2014
I’m honored and excited that
I have been invited to participate as a faculty member at this year’s Atlanta
Photojournalism Seminar November 13-15, 2014. I’ll be speaking on Saturday
morning from 9:00-10:15am
I’ve attended this
outstanding event several times over the years. I always leave with the hopes
of returning for more. Hope you’ll be joining us this year.
The Atlanta Photojournalism
Seminar was founded in 1973 by a group of photojournalists representing
newspapers, magazines and wire services. Its reason for being is to promote the highest standards of photojournalism
through an annual educational conference and a photography contest judged by
working photographers.
Speakers throughout the
years have included Pulitzer Prize winners, Photographer of the Year winners,
major magazine and wire service photographers, influential directors of
photography, important educators in photojournalism, academia, and others
important in this profession. Founded as a regional event, the Atlanta
Photojournalism Seminar has grown to become one of the most prestigious
photojournalism competitions, with participants from throughout the world.
The Seminar will be held at
the Westin Atlanta Perimeter North, which is close to the Dunwoody MARTA
transit station and Perimeter Mall. There are dozens of shops and restaurants nearby.
MARTA offers easy transportation to downtown, Hartsfield-Jackson International
Airport, as well as other Atlanta locations.
The
following is the schedule for the 2014 Atlanta Photojournalism Seminar.
For more information regarding speakers and topics, visit the 2014 Faculty page.
Thursday Video Speakers (November 13)
•
7:30am – Registration desk opens
•
8:30am – Eyeopener videos begin
•
9:30am-5:45pm – Contest Judging (Open to public)
•
9:30-10:45am – Amani Channel / Visual Eye Media
•
11:00-12:15pm – Oliver Janney / CNN
•
12:15-1:30pm – Lunch on your own
•
1:30-2:45pm – Lauren Frohne / Seattle Times
•
3:00-4:15pm – Wes Pope / University of Oregon
•
4:30-5:45pm – Eric Seals / Detroit Free Press
Friday Workshops (November 14)
•
9:00am-6:00pm – Contest Judging (Open to public, except for
portfolio judging)
•
9:00-10:45am
◦
Location
Lighting – Robert Seale / robertseale.com
◦
Shooting
With Your Ears – Oliver Janney / CNN
•
11:00-12:45am
◦
Location
Lighting – Robert Seale / robertseale.com
◦
Shooting
With Your Ears – Oliver Janney / CNN
◦
Sports
– Jamie Squire / Getty Images
•
12:45-2:00pm – Lunch on your own
•
2:15-4:00pm
◦
Go
Pros: Dos, Don'ts, and Drones – Eric Seals / Detroit Free Press
◦
Sports
– Jamie Squire / Getty Images
◦
Standing
on Your Own Two Feet – Judy Herrmann / Herrmann + Starke
•
4:15-6:00pm
◦
Go
Pros: Dos, Don'ts, and Drones – Eric Seals / Detroit Free Press
◦
Standing
on Your Own Two Feet – Judy Herrmann / Herrmann + Starke
•
8:00pm-??? – Portfolio Reviews
Saturday Speakers (November 15)
•
8:40am – Eyeopener videos begin
•
8:50am – Welcome/Announcements
•
9:00-10:15am – Al Diaz / Miami Herald
•
10:30-11:45am – Ken Lyons / The Denver Post
•
11:45-12:45pm – Lunch on your own
•
12:45-2:00pm – Scott Strazzante / San Francisco
Chronicle
•
2:15-3:30pm – Amy Toensing
•
3:45-5:00pm – Matt Eich
•
5:00-5:30pm – Contest awards ceremony
•
8:00-10:00pm – Breakout Sessions (topics and locations TBA)
•
8:00pm-??? – Portfolio Reviews
***All
speakers, dates and times are subject to change.
Exit Glacier ate my camera!
BY ROMAN LYSKOWSKI
RLYSKOWSKI@MIAMIHERALD.COM
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/living/travel/article2925707.html#storylink=cpy
RLYSKOWSKI@MIAMIHERALD.COM
It was overcast, dark for midday and a bit foggy, with a cold and steady drizzle coming down on us, atop the icy glacier.
That’s when the camera slipped out of my hand — covered by a neoprene glove — as I was trying to stick it back inside a pocket of my rain parka.
I watched in horror as the Lumix compact digital camera fell four feet and bounced once off the slippery ice, before sliding ever so slowly toward the brink of a deep crevasse I had just finished photographing.
It was like watching a slow-motion video: The camera seemed to hesitate a second at the edge, before tottering forward and falling down the glowing, bluish-and-gray maw of the fissure.
We were hiking on the slippery ice and snow atop Exit Glacier, just outside Seward, Alaska, in late July 2011. And, with my feet firmly set with the help of mountaineering crampons clamped to my hiking boots, there was no way I could jump or dive for the doomed device – And that’s probably a good thing, since I might’ve joined it in the fall.
We were hiking on the slippery ice and snow atop Exit Glacier, just outside Seward, Alaska, in late July 2011. And, with my feet firmly set with the help of mountaineering crampons clamped to my hiking boots, there was no way I could jump or dive for the doomed device – And that’s probably a good thing, since I might’ve joined it in the fall.
Hearing a string of expletives, one of our two escorts from Exit Glacier Guides trundled over to ask what the heck had happened. My wife, Elissa, was even more upset than I — she knew that the camera’s memory card was almost full, containing several hundred images I had taken while fishing near King Salmon earlier.
The other members of our group offered their sympathies. One even joked about how funny it’d be if 100 years from now someone found the camera, recovered the images and remarked on how oddly folks dressed in 2011.
The other members of our group offered their sympathies. One even joked about how funny it’d be if 100 years from now someone found the camera, recovered the images and remarked on how oddly folks dressed in 2011.
Well, that’s sort of what happened — three years later.
Elissa got a call in early September from Ryan Fisher, one of our two guides and co-owner of Exit Glacier Guides.
Fisher said one of his colleagues, Andy Farrell, found the battered camera around mid-August.
“The camera was found in a compaction zone just below the icefall from where (it) had been dropped,” wrote Fisher in an email. “It landed in a crevasse at the top of the ice fall and slowly made its way down-glacier over the [next three] years.” As the crevasse widened and turned downhill, the glacier must have spit out the camera onto the surface of the ice.
Finding that camera was amazing enough. But after the guides brought it back to the shop, they popped out the memory card and stuck it into their computer’s reader.
Surprise! The images came up undamaged, all 501 of them.
So, how did they know that I was the owner of the camera?
When Fisher looked through the images, he noticed himself — or someone who looked like him — and another guide in some of the wider shots. That made him think the owner could’ve been taken out on the glacier by his company. He found the date the photos were taken in the images’ embedded metadata and checked it against the company’s records. Then he started making phone calls to clients out on the glacier that day
A couple of week later, Fisher shipped us the camera, and the memory card. Fine silt poured out of the beaten-up camera body, but the card and its electronic contacts looked brand new, without even a sign of corrosion.
Thanks to Fisher and to Farrell, I could end my lament of having lost a set of pictures important to me, captured memories that are worth far more to me than the camera itself.
Roman Lyskowski is photo/video editor at the Miami Herald
Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/living/travel/article2925707.html#storylink=cpy
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