Moving Walls 7
A Group Photography Exhibition
Thomas Dworzak | Eric
Gottesman | Brenda Ann Kenneally | Pedro
Linger-Gasiglia | Jon Lowenstein | Jonathan Moller | Ivan Sigal
Introduction
The seventh
Moving Walls exhibit revisits some themes that lie at the core of our mission.
Seven photographers document social struggles—from Ethiopia to New York
City—and their work reflects OSI's commitment to human rights and justice
around the world.
Thomas Dworzak

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War and Peace in the Caucasus: LKN and the Missing
Thomas Dworzak's photographs, from 1999 and 2000, capture the brutal
conflict between Russian troops and Chechen fighters within the context
of the surrounding political landscape.
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Statement | Biography
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Eric Gottesman

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AIDS and Stigma in Ethiopia: If I Could See Your Face, I Would Not
Need Food
Eric Gottesman's photographs demonstrate how the stigma of
AIDS limits the social and professional interactions
of Ethiopians living with HIV and reveal the emotional distress felt by a generation
of parentless children. Out of fear of possible discrimination, many of his
HIV positive subjects asked to be given pseudonyms
and would not allow their faces or any other identifying
feature to be shown. The children in his exhibit are
HIV negative orphans who took their own photographs and wrote about their experiences
and what their deceased parents have missed.
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Statement | Biography
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Brenda Ann Kenneally

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Money, Power, Respect: Real Life Stories from the Hip-Hop Generation
In the New York City borough of Brooklyn, Brenda
Ann Kenneally documents real life stories from the
hip-hop generation, illustrating how drugs and the criminal
justice system have shaped the lives of three women
and their families.
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Statement | Biography
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Pedro Linger-Gasiglia

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Digging the Truth: The Massacre of El Mozote 20 Years Later
In 2001 and 2002, Pedro Linger-Gasiglia joined the Argentine Forensic
Anthropology Team (EAAF) to document its work in El Salvador exhuming
the victims of the El Mozote tragedy, which occurred 20 years earlier.
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Statement | Biography
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Jon Lowenstein

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From Guerrero to Gringolandia and Back: Day Labor, Family and the
New Global Economy
For more than two years, beginning in the summer of 2000, Jon
Lowenstein photographed day laborers in Chicago, capturing both their
personal and professional lives. He explores their role in the new
global economy as temporary workers lacking insurance, health benefits
and job security.
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Statement | Biography
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Jonathan Moller

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Our Culture is Our Resistance: Repression, Refuge and Healing in Guatemala
Jonathan Moller spent nearly 10 years in Guatemala, photographing
the repercussions of that country's civil war and focusing
on the communities that emerged from the army's violent repression of the civilian
population in the early 1980s.
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Statement | Biography
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Ivan Sigal

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After the War: Afghanistan Rediscovers Its Own Vision
In the months immediately after the Taliban were defeated in Afghanistan in 2001, Ivan Sigal discovered hope in that war-ravaged country, documenting the return of mass media and visual culture to a land that was deprived of both under the former government.
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Statement | Biography
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