Archive for art – Page 18

New Student Photo Series 2010 – Entry #1

Today the blog kicks of the second annual new student summer photo series.  We welcome recently admitted students to submit photos and details about how to do so and what to include an be found in this entry.

The first set of photos come from Zhang Bingyuan, an incoming MIA student from China.

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The first photo shows my home in Suzhou city in the province of Jiangsu. It’s a very traditional Chinese garden and we raise lots of fishes in the pool. They often get mad about food, which is shown in the second photo.

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This photo is my aunt Yuan Aihong. She is a Beijing Opera singer and that was her performing Drunken Yang Guifei, a renowned beauty of the Tang dynasty.

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The next photo comes from Karin Vazquez, an incoming MIA student that will focus in Economic and Political Development.  Her comments are below.

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Just like you, one day I will devote some time to taking photography classes. In the meantime I would be glad to share the photo attached with other SIPA students. Believe it or not, it was taken by accident during my honeymoon trip to Mostar (Bosnia-Herzegovina) last year. I was trying to focus the road sign when the poor little boy came up to the car window begging for money.

A quick note: in Boznia-Herzegovina road signs are in both Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. Due to the continuing ethnic disputes, however, the cyrillic scripts in the road signs close to the country’s border with Croatia are all spray-painted out. The opposite happens in the border with Serbia, where the Latin scripts in road signs are covered with spray-paint. Reconciliation is clearly another generation or two away.

Begginer’s luck or human tragedy? I would say both, unfortunately.

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And the final photo today comes from Anoushavan Hambardzoumyan, an incoming MPA student.

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This photo taken by me at the central Armenian village of Bazmaberd. The man in the photo is a worker at the local stone-cutting factory. The photo was taken in 2009.
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New Student Photo Series 2010

I keep telling myself that one day I am going to take a photography class. I have always enjoyed taking photos, and my enjoyment spiked with the digital camera revolution that took place a few years back. I still remember the days of dropping my canisters of film off and coming back a few days later to pick up the physical photos. This includes when I lived in Korea, before the digital camera became mainstream, and before the Internet became mainstream for that matter, and I would develop the photos to send them home to my family.  And yes, the walk to the photo lab was uphill both ways too, in a driving monsoon or snowstorm depending on the season.

This has obviously all changed and now we possess the ability to send pictures to relatives and friends around the world mere seconds after we take them. I cannot actually remember the last time I had a photograph developed at a traditional photo lab.

Each year students from close to 100 different countries enroll at SIPA. I thought that a good way to spice the blog up over the summer would be to welcome photo submissions from our incoming students. The photos can be related to anything you wish. Travel photos, artistic photos, event photos, family and friends photos . . . anything you wish to share. I will then post them to this blog for all to enjoy.

I have Photoshop so I can re-size the photos as necessary so you don’t have to worry about size.  So if you are an incoming student and you want to participate, simply send along your photos to this address: [email protected]. Do note that it can take a while for us to post them so we appreciate your patience.

Please include the following:

  • Your Name
  • Your Degree Program (MIA, MPA, MPA-DP)
  • Where the photo was taken
  • A brief description of the photo

I’ll get the process started with a few of my own.  This photo was taken in the summer of 1994 in Pusan, South Korea. I liked the juxtaposition of the modern, plastic, corporate icon Ronald McDonald and the older gentleman in traditional Korea garb.

This picture was taken in the 50th Street Subway station of the A-C-E line in Manhattan in October of 2004. For a period of months I did a series on discarded coffee cups around the city. I entitled this one, “Separation Anxiety.”

This is not a picture I took, but rather a picture taken of me a few years ago.  When I am not reading admission applications sometimes I like to test gravity.  The older I get, the more gravity exerts its dominance over me but it is fun to keep trying.

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Hopefully this gives you incoming students out there some inspiration and I look forward to receiving your photos so I can post them to the blog for all to see. Once again, send them to [email protected] with the details listed above.


San Francisco Social Networking Opportunity for New Students

An incoming SIPA student recently emailed me and noted that he will be exhibiting photographs taken in Yemen at Bar 821 in San Francisco. The photographs will be up on June 3rd to coincide with the Divisadero Art Walk.

In addition, there will be an official exhibit opening, at the same location, on June 5th from 7-9pm (there will be drink specials if that’s a selling point). You can visit www.revenantphotography.com to see his work and preview some of the Yemen pictures which will be on display. Details will be posted on his blog (blog.revenantphotography.com) as they come available.

New Student Photo Series

I am always intrigued, fascinated, and impressed by the breadth of experience of those in our applicant pool each year.  People from all over the world doing all sorts of things make up the SIPA applicant pool.  When reading applications I constantly try to conjure up images in my head of some of the experiences that applicants describe in their applications.

Last year I came up with a way for admitted applicants to put some of their experiences, and artistic side, on display.  On the blog last summer I featured our first ever New Student Photo Series.  This allowed not only me to have a window into the world of our applicants, it allowed our applicants to learn something about their future classmates before arriving the in fall.

So for now consider this a entry “heads up.”  In about a month I will put out a call to new students to submit pictures for posting on the blog over the summer.  With this in mind, think about photos you would like to share and start looking through shoe boxes of old photos . . . I probably just dated myself there.  I should probably have said, start clicking through your digital archives.

To whet your appetite, here are a few of my favorite photos submitted by the students that joined us last fall.

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New Student Photo Entry #30

The first three photos today come from Tim Shenk, an incoming MIA student.

Here are three photos from a trip that I took to Nepal in March 2009:

Rambha Maya Khamcha, her husband Yam Bahadur Khamcha and their daughter Janaki at their home near Tansen, Nepal. The couple participates in an HIV-awareness program sponsored by the organization I’ve been working for, Mennonite Central Committee.

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My visit to Nepal coincided with Holi, the Hindu festival of colors. It is a great event, involving a lot of colored powder. A group of kids playfully attacked our vehicle with powder and water balloons on the road between Kathmandu and Pokhura.

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Girls break rocks into gravel near Dhading, Nepal. Many families in the area rely on income from crushing and selling gravel, but the girls attend a local school that is trying to prepare them to earn a better living someday.

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The following photo comes from Zaynab El Bernoussi from Morocco, an incoming MPA student.

This picture of a view from Cabo Girão was taken by my father last summer while we were in vacation in Madeira. Cabo Girão is the second highest sea cliff in Europe after Hornelen in Norway. I loved Madeira for its wonderful weather and the beauty of the nature there.

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"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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