please, do not feed the (inferno) artist

Thomas Hallé:
is a Montreal-based part-time epicure, seriously occasional photographer, freelance inferno artist and international man of procrastination.

This is his happy place of eternal ramblings, brain dump, inspirations, upload randomness and other reality-escaping shits...

Can also be found over there:
whoisthomashalle
flickr
vimeo

Curious to see my work? You're better off with the links above but I occasionally put some random and/or crappy and/or funny snaps in here...

And I join in on some meme stuff every now and then too.


Or dare you ask something:
Ask me then.



Yup, that's pretty much it.

(And no, I am not the author of most of that stuff, if you haven't figured that out. Copyrights belong to the original author, obviously. I link to original post or creator whenever possible.)
Designed by Redfield. Icons by Cameron Hunt.
Video

fotojournalismus:

[World Press Photo 2012]

Contemporary Issues, 1st prize stories:  

Child Brides by Stephanie Sinclair

Photos

1. An Ethiopian teenager breast feeds her baby in a rural area outside Bahir Dar. Her husband was maimed shortly after they were married and her lack of education means she must live with her family indefinitely. (16 August 2010)

2. Maya, 8, and Kishore, 13, pose for a wedding photo inside their new home, the day after the Hindu holy day of Akshaya Tritiya in North India. (26 April 2009)

3. Tahani (in pink), who married her husband Majed when she was 6 and he was 25, poses for this portrait with former classmate Ghada, also a child bride, outside their mountain home in Hajjah. Nearly half of all women in Yemen were married as children. Child marriage is outlawed in many countries and international agreements forbid the practice yet this tradition still spans continents, language and religion. (10 June 2011)

4. Rajni, 5, was woken up at 4 am and carried by her uncle to be married in a secret wedding ceremony on the Hindu holy day of Akshaya Tritiya in North India. (26 April 2009)

5. Young girls sit inside a home in the Raffai Village of Al-Zohra district outside of Al Hudayda. (09 February 2010)

[Credit : Stephanie Sinclair/VII Photo Agency for National Geographic Magazine]

Links :



Reblogged from fotojournalismus.

February 10, 2012, 9:25am