SOLICITING SUBMISSIONS FOR PHOTO ESSAY IMC New York - 13.07.2003 13:47
The IMC New York bi-monthly newspaper, The Indypendent, has a new section: one photo essay per month with social or political content. Photographers, please, send us yours. http://images.indymedia.org/imc/nyc/july4photoessay.pdf (About Irak) The New York City Independent Media Center (IMC) has a feature - a one to two page photo essay - to its bi-monthly free paper, The Indypendent. The Indypendent has a print circulation between 15,000 and 20,000 copies, most are distributed in the greater metropolitan area. This photo essay should adhere to the IMC's mission (1) to create a new media ethic by providing progressive, in-depth, and accurate coverage of issues impacting individuals, communities and eco-systems. A critical part of Indymedia's mission is (2) to serve as "a democratic media outlet for the creation of radical, accurate and passionate tellings of truth." To see some of the photoessays published go to http://images.indymedia.org/imc/nyc/july4photoessay.pdf (About Irak) http://images.indymedia.org/imc/nyc/june_1-15.final.8.5x11.pdf (About an immigrant worker in Brooklyn) http://images.indymedia.org/imc/nyc/may_1__8.5_x_11_.pdf (about the MST in Brazil) http://images.indymedia.org/imc/print/march_indy.pdf (about Palestine) For this new photo feature, we would like to publish coherent essays that engage a topic or theme, rather than merely a collection of related images. We want to see photography that reflects the raw passion of independent media makers and documentarians - work that keeps you on the streets looking for challenging images and topics depicting the multitude of social, economic and political concerns that are relevant to our world today as well as depictions of daily life of underrepresented communities all over the world. Each month’s essay will be selected from submissions by the photo essay team, an open group that includes an overlap of photographers and designers. The criteria for the selection will stress the quality of the images and the coherence and topicality of the essay. Photo essays not chosen one month will be considered again for the next month. We are part of a global, community-based, volunteer, and completely non-profit media network . Nobody gets paid at the NYC IMC. Therefore, we can not pay photographers for their work. Through this photo essay, we are providing the opportunity for photographers to have their work published, a photo essay and a topic they really believe in. Photographers, of course, will receive prominent credit for their published work, and retain all copyrights. Photo essays should consist of 10-15 images exploring one global or local topic. Text and captions to contextualize the essay should be included. Submissions will be accepted for review by email (every image should be in one file no bigger than 70 KB) at OR normal mail: Photo Essay NYC Independent Media Center 34 E. 29th Street, 2nd Floor, N.Y., N.Y. 10016. Attention: if you want to mail working prints and would like your submission returned please include a self-addressed pre-stamped envelope. Include your name and contact information on the back of each photo. Submissions will be accepted throughout the year. If you have any question, please contact us at . For more information about the Independent Media Center in New York, visit or . Thanks a lot. NY IMC Photo Essay Team. COMMENTS ABOUT THE INDYPENDENT The Indypendent takes the explosion of online independent media and brings it to the streets of New York City, where it is needed most desperately. Mixing the spirit of direct action with a searing critique of corporate power, the Indypendent is more than fantastic source of alternative news, it is itself a living alternative of another way to live and work. Support it in any way you can! Naomi Klein, commentator, activist and author of "No Logo" With the rise of international global justice movements that are unprecedented in scope and vitality, along with growing resistance here to war and oppression and the search for new and more humane directions for society and politics, there is an urgent need for independent media to which activists and concerned citizens can turn for information and analysis that escapes the filters and doctrinal bounds of the establishment spectrum. In brief, there is an urgent need for the Indypendent newspaper of New York City and the global Indymedia network on which so many have come to rely. |