Tampilkan postingan dengan label Buffalo. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Buffalo. Tampilkan semua postingan

Selasa, 10 Juli 2012

Urban Prairie: Black Flight in America's Rust Belt



 
The US cities of Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo have lost more than a quarter of their population over the last decade.

Once home to predominantly black Americans, many are now leaving in search of better opportunities and a different lifestyle.

Al Jazeera's John Hendren reports from Detroit.

Kamis, 28 Juni 2012

'ObamaCare' in the 'Hood (Buffalo, NY)



 
The US Supreme Court decision to rule President Obama's health care law constitutional has angered conservatives locked in electoral battles across the country - yet, away from the politics of Washington, the effects of the law will be felt by millions of US citizens currently without affordable access to medical aid.

Al Jazeera's Cath Turner visits a community health centre in Buffalo, New York, and speaks with Beverly David Lewis, director of social services, about what differences the new law will make to patients - and to her own family.

Selasa, 18 Januari 2011

Milton Rogovin


Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

Milton Rogovin, Photographer, Dies at 101
by Benjamin Genocchio

Milton Rogovin, an optometrist and persecuted leftist who took up photography as a way to champion the underprivileged and went on to become one of America’s most dedicated social documentarians, died on Tuesday at his home in Buffalo. He was 101.

He died of natural causes, his son, Mark Rogovin, said.

Mr. Rogovin chronicled the lives of the urban poor and working classes in Buffalo, Appalachia and elsewhere for more than 50 years. His direct photographic style in stark black and white evokes the socially minded work that Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange and Gordon Parks produced for the Farm Security Administration during the Depression. Today his entire archive resides in the Library of Congress.

Mr. Rogovin (pronounced ruh-GO-vin) came to wide notice in 1962 after documenting storefront church services on Buffalo’s poor and predominantly African-American East Side. The images were published in Aperture magazine with an introduction by W. E. B. Du Bois, who described them as “astonishingly human and appealing.”

He went on to photograph Buffalo’s impoverished Lower West Side and American Indians on reservations in the Buffalo area. He traveled to West Virginia and Kentucky to photograph miners, returning to Appalachia each summer with his wife, Anne Rogovin, into the early 1970s. In the ’60s he went to Chile at the invitation of the poet Pablo Neruda to photograph the landscape and the people. The two collaborated on a book, “Windows That Open Inward: Images of Chile.”

In a 1976 review of a Rogovin show of photographs from Buffalo at the International Center of Photography in Manhattan, the critic Hilton Kramer wrote of Mr. Rogovin in The New York Times: “He sees something else in the life of this neighborhood — ordinary pleasures and pastimes, relaxation, warmth of feeling and the fundamentals of social connection. He takes his pictures from the inside, so to speak, concentrating on family life, neighborhood business, celebrations, romance, recreation and the particulars of individuals’ existence.”

Read the Full Obituary @ The New York Times