Posts categorized as: Travel Photography


LeRoy Clarke

   May 28th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

It’s now been a couple weeks since I left Trinidad, but as I was longingly reviewing my photographs from the past four months, I realized that I never got around to posting my photographs from a day visit with Master Artist, LeRoy Clarke. The visit began in St. Ann’s, at LeRoy’s Legacy House – El [...]

Red Band Maxi: The Multimedia

   May 6th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

This was the multimedia component of my Red Band Maxi installation about the public transportation system in Trinidad and Tobago. The installation was held at Alice Yard in Port of Spain, Trinidad, on Monday, May 3rd.

Red Band Maxi: Photographs from the Installation

   May 6th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

On the evening of Monday, May 3rd, I held my first solo photography installation, entitled “Red Band Maxi”. The installation was held at Alice Yard in Port of Spain, Trinidad. It was all about privately owned Maxi Taxis, which are the dominant form of public transportation in Trinidad and Tobago. The installation included a projected [...]

Celia Weiss Bambara at Alice Yard

   Apr 5th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

On March 25th, 2010, dancer Celia Weiss Bambara performed a site-specific work in progress at the Alice Yard art space in Port of Spain. Her dynamic piece, beginning which reflected her extensive background in African diasporic contemporary dance, was about the “cyclical and intergenerational nature of violence” (Artist’s words).

Glimpse into Hinduism in Trinidad

   Mar 20th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

These images follow a series of glimpses that I’ve had over the past couple weeks into Hinduism in Trinidad. These images are from the Temple in the Sea in Waterloo, from the 85 foot Hanuman Murti in Carapichaima, which is the largest Hanuman Murti outside of India, and from the Saturday portion of Phagwa at [...]

J’ouvert Morning 2010

   Mar 7th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

These photos are from my favorite part of Carnival in Trinidad. J’ouvert (prounounced “joo-vay”) is a morning celebration, beginning around 2am on Carnival Monday when masqueraders take to the streets, covered in paint, mud, oil, and chocolate, dancing until day break. The word J’ouvert stems from the French words “jour ouvert” or “open day”. As [...]

Blue Devils, Paramin Village

   Feb 27th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
2 comments

On the evening of February 15th, Carnival Monday in Trinidad and Tobago, I took a windy and very steep drive up the mountain in Maraval to Paramin Village to see one of the traditional Carnival characters, the Blue Devils, “perform.” I put “perform” in quotations because, as anyone who has seen Trinidad’s Blue Devils knows, [...]

3canal Jam-It! Rehearsal and Show

   Feb 20th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

A few weeks ago, I posted an image set from the 3canal media launch party at Alice Yard in Port of Spain. More recently, I was fortunate enough to be invited to the successful rapso group’s rehearsal for their show, Jam-It!, at Queen’s Hall. I then also attended their show on February 8th. It’s been [...]

National Kalinda Stickfighting Finals 2010

   Feb 5th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

“Bois!” The word literally translated means “wood” in French. In Trinidad, Boismen can be heard chanting “Bois!” during Kalinda matches. Kalinda is a traditional Trinidadian martial art in which Boismen challenge each other with wooden sticks. Kalinda is not just about stick fighting, though. It also incorporates drumming, chanting by a Chantuelle (or “Chantwell”), and [...]

Panorama Semi-Finals

   Feb 3rd, 2010  |  By Andrea  
1 Comment

On January 31st, thousands of Trinis gathered in The Savannah in Port of Spain for the 2010 Panorama Semi-Finals. Hundreds of steelpan musicians came out to compete and celebrate Trinidad’s national instrument, the pan. The pan, also known as the steel drum, was invented in Trinidad, and the instrument has evolved over the years from [...]

Tunapuna Market

   Jan 24th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

I love markets, so I was eager to go visit the Market in Tunapuna, Trinidad, and I was even more excited when I found everyone to be agreeable to me snapping pictures during my visit. There’s something about rows and rows of fresh produce and ordinary people going about their daily lives that gives you [...]

Jemima Charles’ Cones at Alice Yard

   Jan 23rd, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

This past Friday, I attended my second event at Alice Yard: the opening for Jemima Charles’ Cones installation. Ms. Charles is a young Trinidadian artist whose interest in paper led her to study art in Japan. The construction of Ms. Charles’ cones are drawn from the paper lantern technique, which is also used sculpturally at [...]

Disparity of Wealth in Port of Spain

   Jan 22nd, 2010  |  By Andrea  
2 comments

These photos begin to trace the disparity of wealth in Port of Spain. Sea Lots, built into cleared out mangroves, is one of the most impoverished areas of Port of Spain, and it sits directly across a beautiful waterfront from the downtown Banker’s Row section of the city. We were brought there by a woman [...]

Along the Seine River, Paris.

   Jan 21st, 2010  |  By Nathan  
1 Comment

I took a tour of Paris from the Seine River on a nice but overcast day. It was interesting to watch people living their lives along side the river. Paris is quite a unique city.

3canal at Alice Yard, Port of Spain

   Jan 20th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
1 Comment

Part of my semester in Trinidad includes an internship with Alice Yard, an independent art space in Port of Spain. These photographs are from the first event at Alice Yard that I attended–the media launch party for Jam-It, the new 3 canal show “for life love and liberté”. 3 canal is a prominent rapso group [...]

Trinidad Smoke Ceremony

   Jan 19th, 2010  |  By Andrea  
Comments Off

On our first full day in Trinidad, we walked up to the top of Calvary Hill in Arima, where Christo Adonis, the head Kalinago, “Carib,” Shaman on the island performed a traditional smoke ceremony to welcome us to Trinidad. The Kalinago people were mostly wiped out as a result of European colonial rule, so to [...]

Cambodian Moon Festival, Phnom Penh

   Jan 15th, 2010  |  By Nathan  
Comments Off

The river that flows through the heart of Phnom Penh is nothing short of astonishing. Astonishing not only because of it’s size (this is the location where the Tonle Sap and Mekong rivers meet), but also because of it’s historic and religious significance. This photo essay documents religious activity that I observed along the river. [...]

Fostering Young Minds: An ADC Project

   Oct 27th, 2009  |  By Nathan  
Comments Off

During the summer of 2009 Andrea and I traveled with the African Development Coalition to document the group’s humanitarian project in Guinea, West Africa. We lived in Guinea for almost two months, spending most of our time in Conakry and the small village of Mitty Maadou. During our travels, the political and military tensions in [...]

Food by the River – Phnom Penh, Cambodia

   Oct 25th, 2009  |  By Nathan  
Comments Off

The river that runs through the capital city of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, plays an enormous role in the culture and lifestyle of the Khmer people. Strewn with fishing boats, temples, public works of art, musicians, and street vendors, the river is a way of life for many people in the bustling city of almost 2 [...]