World AIDS Day/The Mask Project
In an effort to raise awareness of issues surrounding HIV/AIDS, housing, poverty and justice, clients and supporters of The Center in Asbury Park participated in a mask-making project that resulted in an amazing array of one-of-a-kind works of art.
During the face casting process, each *face donor* was asked a series of self-reflective questions; the answers were then used by the artists to depict the face of the person. Found objects were used to decorate the masks as a way of mirroring the experience of homeless persons who make do with the resources available to them in their daily travels.
The masks were auctioned off tonight as part of the local commemoration of World AIDS Day and I stopped by to see the exhibit. I’d been hearing about the project for months through a couple of my clients… some of whom *donated* their face for a mask… of the 60 masks, this was the only one I thought looked familiar.
😉
Were you aware of anything happening in your community today to commemorate World AIDS Day?
A video about the project is available on YouTube by clicking here.
Eagles at Conowingo
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I mean to make some point, but don’t have the patience with myself tonight to actually get there.
😉
I’m pretty convinced the Conowingo Dam in Maryland is THE place to go on the East Coast to see bald eagles in winter.
It’s spectacular! Go there!
(bring your long lens, though)
I’ve never seen so many eagles at one time, in so many plumages… juvenile eagles are gorgeous!
The setting doesn’t befit them, but still it manages to be memorable and goosebump-making.
I’ll remember the people there with me and the sound of their cameras (hundreds of shutters clicking at once like the sound I imagine on the red carpet at a movie premiere) and feeling very, very lucky to have the chance to witness such a thing.
Shadow shot
2/100
This is Otis… he’s a photographer from Virginia. We met today at the Conowingo Dam in Maryland where we were both photographing the bald eagles that congregate there in the winter.
Truth be told, with my little lens, I was mostly photographing the other people that were photographing the eagles…
Talk about camera envy!
I hesitate to call anyone I met today a stranger… there’s a certain camaraderie that exists naturally among birders and others who enjoy the outdoors. I do know, however, that many of us prefer to remain behind the lens. Otis was an exception to that and I was glad for his smile (and to know that much of his set-up, intimidating as it looks, is homemade and affordable.)
More about the eagles in another post.
This photo is #2 in my 100 strangers project. Find out more about the project and see pictures taken by other photographers at Flickr 100 Strangers or www.100Strangers.com
Skywatch Friday: A Poet’s Bridge
Clouds and the vast marshes that surround the Sidney Lanier Bridge near Jekyll Island, GA.
Visit here for more Skywatch Friday posts.
Praise and thanksgiving
The king is dead* and the chessboard reshuffles uncomfortably
Dear Powers-That-Be,