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Brazil’s most popular TV station Globo, joins the Belo Monte Campaign

It seems like the campaign against the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam is gathering momentum and coming into the mainstream, in Brazil at least…

The most popular, widely available and famous TV station in Brazil: Globo, famous for its soap operas watched by a huge proportion of the population, has made a video for the people of Brazil talking about the affects of the dam, and why it’s important for everyone to think about and how they’ll be affected.

You can see the video with english subtitles here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVUYV4YuKjc

The petition can be seen here (Portuguese): http://www.movimentogotadagua.com.br/

Feeding the 5000 photos

Feeding the 5000 was a truly fantastic and inspiring event to be involved in. It was a great way to educate the public about food waste and food security. And of course a chance for everyone to share a free lunch!

There was a brief appearance from Boris Johnson which helped bring some mainstream press coverage to the event too. I concentrated on the more subtle details of the day, especially interesting was the huge pile of food provided by produce world that was rejected by the supermarkets because it wasn’t perfect – what a signifier of how much perfectly good food is wasted unnecessarily every day: current estimates put it at 30% of all food in the UK!

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Feeding the 5000

Heading down to the Feeding the 5000 event on Friday with my camera, organised by Friends of the Earth:  http://www.feeding5k.org/

Riverford

In August whilst I was down in Devon shooting the first phase of Food Matters, one of the key locations I visited was Riverford Organic in Totnes. Riverford is an independent organic farm, farm shop and award winning restaurant.  Their main business is providing weekly veg boxes, as well as high quality meat and dairy. The vast majority of food is grown on the farm or by their partner farms in the local area.

Thanks to Rachel Lovell They were very helpful and willing to grant me full access in exchange for some photos. I documented the whole farm, orchards, salad patch and strawberry picking, plus their semi automated processing and packing area. Since visiting the farm I’m now a weekly Riverford customer: there’s something really satisfying about knowing and having seen exactly where and how your food has made its way to you.

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Belo Monte Dam on Radio 4

Broadcast back in May, ‘Costing the Earth’ on BBC Radio 4 was about the Belo Monte Dam. Tim Hirsch was also working with Ruy Sporsati of the local NGO and branch of Amazon Watch: Xingu Vivo Para Sempre (translated link). The show show gives an insight into the local people that will be affected by the Dam, after visiting local communities in the Xingu region.

Listen to it here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b010y0t5

Photographer’s ‘Baptism of fire’ during the August Riots

Here’s a link to an interesting short video piece about how Press Association photographer Lewis Whyld survived the riots in Tottenham in August, shooting for the first few hours on his camera phone. Some really impressive stuff anyway, let alone shooting on a tiny phone lens in some extreme conditions and difficult lighting. Hat’s off to him. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15519194

 

Brooke Sharkey Indiegogo pitch

I’m proud to say that I’m friends with the very talented folk singer Brooke Sharkey, and have recently been following her and band to some gigs and practice sessions, documenting a part of the wave of new folk acts coming out of East London.

Brooke is currently in the process of making her debut album, and paying for it through crowd funding on Indiegogo. So if you can, please support her in this quest, you will not be disappointed… Here’s the link: http://www.indiegogo.com/Brooke-Sharkey-Album#share

iSpeak

Photo: Adrian Fisk

Adrian Fisk’s interesting and unique photo project: ‘iSpeak‘ has come to a major turning point – being supported by the UN Population Fund for the next phase – iSpeak global.

Here’s an excerpt from the ‘Business Insider’ article, briefly explaining the project:

Photographer Adrian Fisk traveled 2,700 kilometers across China and India to discover that most young people are, in essence, exactly the same.

While living in India, Fisk realized he knew nothing about young people in the nearby country of China, and neither did anyone else in India. Fisk dug deeper into the subject and came across the staggering fact that there are 1.2 billion people under the age of 30 years old in China and India.

Full article: http://www.businessinsider.com/united-nations-supports-ispeak-china-india-adrian-fisk-2011-10#ixzz1cPJQxEUS

Putting Down Roots, at Tottenham community allotment

Last week I visited the Tottenham community allotment which is part of both the ‘Putting down roots’ and ‘Capital Growth’ inner London food growing initiatives. Putting down roots in run in association with St Mungos shelter, and is a way of rehabilitating homeless people through growing food. The Tottenham community allotment is a grow to sell scheme, supported by Capital Growth: the campaign to support community food growing project in London. I’m going to be working with both these organisations over the coming months.

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Occupy the City at St Pauls – Eviction Pending

It was announced on the news yesterday, that St Pauls Cathedral and the City of London Corporation have filed for an eviction order for the anti-capitalist protesters that have been there since 15th October. This occupation has, on the whole, given the protest movement in the UK some good press, especially compared to the riots and student protests earlier in the year. The occupiers have been media savvy and have successfully got their point across in a peaceful way. The location has also worked in their favour, bringing in a lot of walk by support and interest. Like half of the photographers in London, I was down there at the start of the occupation. I was shooting for the wire through Barcroft Media / Specialist Stock.

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Belo Monte Dam construction site occupied

Things are hotting up with the resistance to the Belo Monte dam in Brazil, the project I was working on back in April. Last Thurs, hundreds of protesters including leaders and members of the the Kayapo, Paquicamba, Arara and Juruna tribes, occupied the construction site.

It was reported on the BBC website on the 28th Oct, link here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-15487852

Featured on the Printspace blog

The excellent gallery and print studio in East London – the printspace, has featured some of my recent work on their blog today. The link is http://www.theprintspace.co.uk/blog/phil-clarke-hill/

I had the honour of being involved in the ‘So show me II’ exhibition there last month. Thanks for the feature and selection Cathy and Wido.

Food Matters

Project now named ‘Food Matters.’ This is my official explanatory statement:

In a nation of over 60 million, the amount of food consumed every year in the UK, greatly outstrips what is grown here. Food has become a commodity, and one that is often seen as less important to spend our hard earned cash on than to new TVs, cars and holidays. This hasn’t always been the case, in the post war era, food was seen as so important that rationing continued for several years after the country was stable as a whole, and this was when we still had a largely rural based economy.

Nowadays, the Great British public seem to be more out of touch with where our food comes from and how it gets to our tables than ever before.

With meat coming in plastic trays, vegetables wrapped in Clingfilm and pastries factory packaged ready for the microwave, it’s little wonder that many don’t even consider that these products must have come from an animal or plant somewhere along the way, albeit quite far down the line in many cases.

A great deal of food is still grown and produced in the UK, and increasingly those who are doing so are making a point of using it as a unique selling point, often at a premium price (does it not seem wrong that it costs less to produce something in Kenya than in Kent).

The ‘Food Matters’ project bridges this gap between consumers and producers of food in the UK. With photography and multimedia, the project shows what is going behind the closed doors of the UK food industry, ranging from small scale organic veg box farms and community gardens, to traditional livestock and arable sites, to large industrial operations with automated packing and international distribution.

The project will reconnect consumers with where their food comes from, how it is made, and the sheer scale of this multimillion pound industry that is essential to the survival of every one of us.

For companies willing to grant access for the project, it will improve their business through showing transparency and good practice in their production, as well as an opportunity to showcase any new and interesting technologies they are utilizing to make the production more efficient, greener and safer.

Food security and Food Sovereignty are not widely known terms at present, but are issues that will affect everyone increasingly in the coming years, and are only going to become more important in business and national policy. Whilst photographing the Cereal’s event and Fruit Focus for Haymarket exhibitions this year, I picked up a lot on this topic in the discussion forums, it seemed like it was on everyone in the industry’s minds, including Dominic Dyer of the Crop Protection Association and Peter Kendall of the NFU to name just 2 eminent speakers present. As an island nation that imports over 50% of the food that is annually consumed, the UK could be hit a lot harder than many of our European neighbors, if the risks are not addressed quickly and seriously. There are many different ideas, approaches and theories as to what will happen and how to tackle it, and ‘Food Matters’ aims to explore as many of these as possible, from both sides of the fence.

Some things like strawberries still have to be hand planted. Riverford Organics Aug 2011

Food Cycle

In a couple of weeks time I’m going to be shadowing the work of food cycle, a organisation that collects waste food that would be thrown away by supermarkets to distribute to those that need it, including cooking it and selling it at bargain price at their cafe in Crouch end. Check them out: http://www.foodcycle.org.uk/

Oruro Carnival Pictures published

Back in February, I was sent to Oruro in Bolivia by Tom Broadbent of Bizarre magazine, to document the annual Carnival, known by some as the Devil’s carnival. This is because the locals dress as Devils and various other costumes, parade through the streets to the sound of brass bands, throw water and foam at each other, drink all day and night, and generally get up to all the carnage that they not supposed to do during the rest of the year.

The celebrations also include a llama sacrifice ceremony down a tin mine, in which I ended up covered in llama blood, face, glasses and clothes! but it was well worth it for the shots. Besides, the whole process was very humane and is a long-standing tradition, the miners see it as lucky, and judging by the conditions they work in every day, I can completely understand that anything to help them feel safer in the mines is greatly welcomed. When shooting this I was with 2 wire photographers from Reuters (David Mercado) and AFP (Jorge Bernal), working as a team we found the mine and gained access, all conducted in Spanish which I proudly managed to understand most of. The photos and article was published in the August print issue of Bizarre, and now a larger edit is on their website, have a look at it here. Below are is a small selection of shots from it for you…

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All images 2007-2024 Phil Clarke Hill