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If you’re interested in attending  Momenta’s Project New Orleans: Working with Nonprofits, two spots have opened up on the workshop! Read below for more details.

If you are a member of a professional organization like WPOW, WHNPA, NPPA, ASMP, ASPP, PPA, etc., you quality for 10% off the tuition. Students and military also get a 10% discount. Email the Momenta staff at info(at)momentaworkshops.com for more information.

Project New Orleans in collaboration with
Leica Camera Logo

Location: New Orleans, Louisiana
Dates: April 10 – 14, 2013
Cost: $1650
Please contact our office for itinerary and travel information.

  • Momenta provides each student with a detailed questionnaire, we use this to match each student’s interest with a nonprofit in NOLA
  • Each student will get their own nonprofit to work with, based on feedback from our pre-workshop student questionnaire
  • Momenta will handle all pre-workshop logistics for nonprofit assignments including introductions to each nonprofit occuring about 1-2 weeks before the workshop
  • Student work benefits small, local nonprofits in their need to publicize and project their activities to new audiences
  • Momenta presents an intensive instruction on Photo Mechanic and photo asset archiving
  • Students receive daily personal reviews with lead instructor and Momenta staff
  • Nightly slideshows, lectures and group critiques
  • Daily mentoring and story development editing one-on-one with an instructor for at least one hour a day
  • Voluntary multimedia instruction for interested attendees
  • Lectures on narrative storytelling, elements of a photo story and history of documentary photography
  • Final slide show and party hosted by Momenta for all students, nonprofit staff, general public and members of the photographic community

Click through last year’s student work!

If you’ve never been to New Orleans, you are in for a wonderful adventure when you join Momenta in 2013. This is our most popular domestic workshop and it fills up every year.

During your trip with us, you will not only learn to work directly with a nonprofit on a relevant photo story but you will also receive lectures on business models for making nonprofit photography work for you, including how to market your portfolio for nonprofit clients as well as financing a personal project through grant writing and public fund raising.

New Orleans has been our host for the last five years for this amazing workshop and the welcome from the nonprofits every year is overwhelmingly positive. The city is alive with nonprofit and community groups dedicated to rebuilding the Big Easy back to its former glory and helping the areas of the city that are still suffering, years later, from the after effects of Katrina.

Momenta will offer to connect photographers with nonprofit organizations we have worked with in the past. However, we encourage more advanced photographers to find their own photo story or charity of their choice. Don’t worry! Our team of instructors and staff will guide you every step of the way if you choose to venture down this road.

Every day of the workshop, Momenta staff and instructors with work with you to develop a photo story that is close to your personal vision and embodies the workshop theme of “hope and recovery.” We do this through daily editing one-on-one with you and an instructor for about one hour each evening.

A great addition to our curriculum in 2013 is the collaboration of Momenta and Leica during of our series of Project workshops. All photographers on this trip will have the opportunity to borrow and use the digital Leica M9s and lenses to use in your photo stories. We will have a special lecture during orientation about the use of Leicas and their great history with documentary photography.

Students are also encouraged to record audio for multimedia presentations and their portfolio. Momenta will have audio gear on hand to borrow. Multimedia instruction and editing will also be available for interested attendees.

On the final night of the workshop, Momenta hosts a student slide show presentation for all the organizations who participated in the workshop as well as neighborhood residents, local photographers and journalists, the members of the Photo Alliance and the workshop attendees. The slideshow is truly a moving and emotional experience for everyone involved. It creates a wonderful atmosphere of camaraderie and celebration to end our time together!

We hope you can join us for this very special workshop experience in New Orleans, Louisiana, one of America’s most vibrant and exciting cities!

Workshop fees include: one-on-one editing with instructors on a daily basis, personal portfolio reviews, a student handbook, all handouts and workshop materials, daily slideshows and lectures, software and equipment training, an opening night dinner and our final celebration and slideshow party provided by Momenta for the public at our headquarters in the Garden District.

Workshop fees do not include: meals, transportation, hotel accommodations. Momenta does offer suggestions for housing and transportation deals in New Orleans.

Please contact our staff for a trip itinerary and travel arrangement questions.

About your Instructors

From Pennsylvania Avenue to Bourbon Street, Chris Usher and Jamie Rose have worked together photographing politics and major news events in our Nation’s Capital for nearly a decade. They met on assignment covering the President many years ago and have been colleagues and friends ever since. Chris and Jamie have taught this workshop together five times now and are so elated to continue this great workshop series in 2012.

For the last seven years, Chris Usher has been dedicated to the continuing coverage of the human diaspora created by Hurricane Katrina. Chris’ work was initially featured in TIME magazine and later published into a book, One of Us. When not covering the White House and Congress, he works and visits in his “second home” of New Orleans as much as possible.

Jamie Rose is our Director of Workshops and has been a documentarian for the last decade. She covered the effects of Hurricane Katrina for nonprofit organizations, which lead her to create this workshop in New Orleans with Chris. Jamie believes strongly in the power documentary photography to give back to all the providers working so hard to help in the recovery and rebuilding of the Crescent City.

Learn more about your instructors by visiting Our Instructors page.

For More Information

Please email our staff for further information at info@momentaworkshops.com. You may also reach Director of Workshops Jamie Rose between the hours of 9:30 a.m – 5 p.m. EST, Monday through Friday at our offices at 202.688.1448.

Please contact us for more information about this workshop today!

 

 

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Through the Eyes of Hope Project is having an Art Auction June 26th fro 6:00pm-9:00pm Friday on June 26th from 6-9pm at Priority Associates, 144 E 44th St # 7
New York, NY 10017 to help raise funds for cameras, photo supplies and school fees for the children in the photography program in Rwanda!

We are looking for ARTISTS to Donate a piece of art for this auction. We are hoping to give back a % of each piece sold to the artist. If you have anything small or big please bring it out and participate. It can be framed or matted or not and any type is welcomed. We have had friends email work as well. If interested email me Linda Smith Lcphoto77@yahoo.com or Andrea Dunn russianaffair@gmail.com

Thanks guys and I do hope you can all come out ! It will be fun!!

Peace,

Linda

P.S. If you have any film or digital cameras that you would like to donate, Andrea and I will have a donations box for the cameras, they are extremely helpful and used by many, many children.

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Okay, everyone, I am selling a bunch of my Canon gear. I went online and found the average price based on what was offered. I’ll put these on eBay on Tuesday if I don’t get any offers. No shipping if you’re in DC. I’ll only take PayPal or cash.

Here’s what’s offered with a Jamie’s List price.:

Canon A2E body (mint condition) – Seriously, this was barely used. Bought it to shoot weddings a while back and had it for 6 months before it went back in the box. Comes with body cap + camera strap too.  – $95.00

Canon 1V & Battery Grip – this actually hurts to sell since I just love this camera so much but I rarely shoot film anymore! I did my thesis on this camera and it served so well in the trenches. Comes with body cap + camera strap + good karma too. – $415.00

Canon EF Ultrasonic 28-105 f/3.5-4.5 – great condition, never been dropped, not internal or lens scratches, comes with front and back caps – $212.00

Canon 540 EZ Speedlite Flash – In good shape, works great, had it as a backup flash, comes with leather case. It has velcro on the top but that can be removed. – $99.00
Feel free to make an offer if you really want something! I just want to get it out of the camera bags and into someone’s hands who wants them. Thanks, guys!!

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Playing in NYC and coming soon to DC.
Copy and paste URL in your web browser
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y06bkDVCM6w

Visit our website at:

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-winning documentary film on life of photojournalist Eddie Adams to premier at “Docu Week” in New York

Kiefer Sutherland narrates “An Unlikely Weapon” a Morgan Cooper Production
NEW YORK – The award winning documentary film “An Unlikely Weapon” featuring the life of world-renowned photojournalist Eddie Adams will premier Friday, Aug. 8 and run through Thursday, Aug. 14 at “Docu Week” in New York at the Village East Cinema, 181 2nd Ave, New York, NY.
Eddie Adams photographed 13 wars, six American presidents, and every major film star of the last 50 years. In 1968, in 1/500th of a second Eddie Adams photographed Saigon police chief, General Nygoc Loan, shooting a Vietcong guerilla point black. Some say that photograph ended the Vietnam War. The photo brought Eddie fame and a Pulitzer Prize, but Eddie was haunted by the man he had vilified. He would say, ‘Two lives were destroyed that day, the victim’s and the general.’ Others would say three lives were destroyed.
Eddie was comfortable with kings and coal miners and won hundreds of awards for his photography. During his time with Parade magazine, he photographed Clint Eastwood, Louis Armstrong, Mother Teresa, and Pope John Paul, and he carved out many careers shooting covers for Life, Time, and even Penthouse.
Eddie’s 1977 photo-series of “The Boat People”, refugees escaping Vietnam, persuaded Congress to admit two hundred thousand Vietnamese into America.  ”It was the only good thing I did in my life,” Eddie said, “but I am not a good guy.”
The film, directed by Susan Morgan Cooper and narrated by Kiefer Sutherland and a score by Kyle Eastwood and Michael Stevens (Letters from Iwo Jima), and appearances by Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings, Morley Safer, Gordon Parks, Peter Arnett and many others, is a retrospective on a n incredible photojournalist that was never satisfied with himself, but others knew the good he did and how he changed their lives forever.
“An Unlikely Weapon” was recently honored by being named the best documentary film at the 25th Avignon Film Festival in France. It has also been selected to screen at the Rhode Island International Film Festival on Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2008 and in Los Angeles Aug. 22-28 at the ArcLight (Sherman Oaks).

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Thanks to chip:

http://ngm.typepad.com/editors_pick/2008/05/film-is-dead-lo.html

the great debate over what medium to work with continues… :)

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