Open Society and Soros Foundation
about usinitiativesgrants and scholarshipsresource centernewsroom
Contact
Search


Moving Walls 11

A Group Photography Exhibition
Multimedia:   SLIDESHOW  

Lynsey Addario | Marcus Bleasdale | Julien Chatelin | Katja Heinemann | Tim Hetherington | Sara Terry

Introduction

With photographs from four continents, the 11th Moving Walls exhibition captures the breadth of the Open Society Institute’s mission. At the same time, the show’s focus on Africa reflects OSI’s growing commitment to supporting open society in a region associated by many with only war, poverty, and AIDS. By exploring the issues around resource wealth, ethnic cleansing and displacement, and the transition from conflict to peace, the photographs give visual meaning to some of the underlying reasons for the challenges many countries in Africa face.


Lynsey Addario


Darfur in Exile
The Sudanese province of Darfur has become synonymous with ethnic cleansing. Lynsey Addario shows the desperate conditions of Darfurian refugees, who have been forced from their homes in a campaign of state-sponsored violence with seemingly no end in sight.

Photo Gallery | Artist Statement | Biography

back to the top of the page

Marcus Bleasdale


The Rape of a Nation: Natural Resource Exploitation in the Democratic Republic of Congo
Peace also remains elusive in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the West’s desire for minerals and gems continues to fuel conflict over control of natural resources. By exploring the lives of miners and their surrounding community in resource-rich eastern Congo, Marcus Bleasdale offers a stark depiction of mining’s devastating consequences.

Photo Gallery | Artist Statement | Biography

back to the top of the page

Julien Chatelin


Lhasa: The Lost Soul of Tibet
Julien Chatelin explores the question of cultural identity in a place free from violence—Lhasa, the capital of Tibet—but where a half-century of Chinese occupation has diluted the traditional way of life. Signs of Tibetan culture are inconspicuous or else exploited for tourism in Chatelin’s portrait of a city trapped in China’s stranglehold.

Photo Gallery | Artist Statement | Biography

back to the top of the page

Katja Heinemann


On Borrowed Time: Growing up with HIV/AIDS in the United States
Though some in the United States now consider AIDS a foreign blight, Katja Heinemann challenges this view by showing how the disease has affected American children living with HIV. Infected through blood transfusions or from the first wave of HIV-positive mothers, many are left to deal with the physical and psychological burdens of their illness in isolation from their peers.

Photo Gallery | Artist Statement | Biography

back to the top of the page

Tim Hetherington


No Condition Is Permanent: Liberia in Transition
In Liberia, as the end of a brutal dictatorship has brought new hope for stability in West Africa, it has also raised questions about how to ensure democracy in a country ravaged by decades of violence. Tim Hetherington's photographs, which document the dismantling of Charles Taylor’s regime, provide a unique perspective. Though the media often portray Liberia as a place of mindless chaos and faceless victims, Hetherington’s work reveals the personal lives that are irrevocably changed by the events of war.

Photo Gallery | Artist Statement | Biography

back to the top of the page

Sara Terry


Aftermath: Bosnia's Long Road to Peace
Sara Terry turns to Bosnia to look at how society rebuilds itself in the aftermath of conflict, a story that often goes untold. Taken after nearly a decade of formal peace, her photographs show Bosnians working to overcome the legacies of a crippling war and return to normal life.

Photo Gallery | Artist Statement | Biography

back to the top of the page
share  print  print

About Us  |  Initiatives  |  Grants, Scholarships & Fellowships  |  Resource Center  |  Newsroom  |  Site Map  |  About this Site  |  Contact


Creative Commons License
Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative License.
©2008 Open Society Institute. Some rights reserved.

400 West 59th Street  |  New York, NY 10019, U.S.A.  |  Tel 1-212-548-0600

OSI-New York, OSI-Budapest, OSF-London, OSI-Paris and OSI-Brussels are separate organizations that operate independently
yet cooperate informally with each other. This website, a joint presentation, is intended to promote each organization’s interests.