Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

Thursday, November 01, 2018

Free Photography Lecture in Fez



Thursday, November 1 at 6:30 PM at the ALIF RIAD

In this session we are going to present “Insider-Fototour,” one of the finest organizations dedicated to photography in Germany. Please bring 10 of your best photographs on USB for a discussion over a cup of tea. This workshop will be led by the director of the organization, Carola Schmitt, a photographer specialized on people and street photography.

ALC–ALIF Photography Club
Contact: Omar Chennafi
Email: alifphotoclub@gmail.com
GSM: 0659661502
ALIF RIAD
www.alcfezbook.com
https://www.facebook.com/ALC.ALIF.Photography.Club

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Friday, October 19, 2018

Architectural Photography Workshop in Fez



Sunday, October 21 at 10:30 AM (Meet in front of the Batha Fountain)
This session is about Architectural photography. You will be able to gain insight into Moroccan architecture and enjoy the beauty of the ancient historical buildings of Fez Medina.

Architectural photographers are usually skilled in the use of specialis
ed techniques and equipment. If you have a wide-angle lens and tripod please bring them with you.

ALC–ALIF Photography Club
Omar Chennafi
Email: alifphotoclub@gmail.com
GSM: 0659661502
ALIF RIAD
www.alcfezbook.com
https://www.facebook.com/ALC.ALIF.Photography.Club

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Wednesday, October 03, 2018

Fez World Photo Walk


Fez World Photo Walk - Join the Largest Social Photography Event in the World!Saturday, Meet up on October 6 at 10:30 AM in front of Batha Fountain.


On Saturday, October 6, 2018, the whole world will be walking again during Scott Kelby’s 11th Annual Worldwide Photowalk™. Taking place in cities around the world, photographers of all walks of life and skill levels gather together to socialize, share and inspire during this one-day, worldwide event.

About the Fez walk :https://worldwidephotowalk.com/walk/fez-world-photowalk/

ALC-ALIF Photography Club will be leading the 2018 Worldwide Photowalk that is taking place in Fez, Morocco. We are going to meet in front of Batha Fountain.

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Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Fez - First impressions - Lauren Crabbe


Photo-journalist Lauren Crabbe is a guest of The View From Fez and recently went on her first tour around the Medina of Fez with one of the few female guides. Lauren reports back


I’ve been fascinated with the idea of travelling to Morocco for nearly two-thirds of my life. When I started seriously researching and planning my trip, one of the first concepts that caught my interest was that of djinns – spirits of Arabic lore that help or hinder daily life.

The word djinn can also translate as “hidden from sight”, a meaning I couldn’t help but correlate to my initial wanderings of the famous Fez Medina.

Djinns were present in every zigzagging alleyway, threading their way around the people. They’re the padlocks on doors, the coloured streets with no names I’ll probably never be able to find again, the furtive glances from beneath hijabs and rounded eyes of the children holding their mothers’ hands, full of question.


They’re the subtle cues embedded in ancient architecture, the tricks of the tradespeople performed behind closed curtains, the many intricacies one will miss if they make the mistake of not looking up.

There’s a lot I could presume about Fez…but sense there’s more truth in what goes unsaid. In the space around what’s right before my eyes. In secrets I haven’t yet earned the right to hear. The kind of place you visit time and time again, only to realise you know less about it than when you started.

But still; I’ve got to try. So I enlisted the service of Fatima Zahra Hanafi, one of Fez’s precious few female tour guides. It was inspiring to be shown around the Medina by a female guide who turned out to be anything but reserved. Disarmingly confident, she immediately quizzed about my preferences and primary interests regarding Fez, and I felt reassured this would not be a typical assembly line tour.

Lauren and Fatima Zahra

I should have expected no less for a city in which everything is handmade and meaningful. Nothing is superfluous. The cobalt shade adorning the zellij on the Blue Gate – signifying welcome. The protruding poles from the sides of minarets, which – to an outsider might represent shoddy construction – point in the direction of Mecca. The meandering lanes of shopfronts bursting with artisanal goods, an interactive exhibition of skill and legacy.

Many lanes house a particular trade with its own sensory hallmark. Fatima Zahra Hanafi steered me through them with casual dexterity and constant reminders to use my nose and ears. No sight, sound or scent went unappreciated. The musk of cedar from the woodworkers; the sour tang and brightly coloured puddles made by the dyers; the copper cacophony of metalworkers; the salty, pungent punch from the fishmongers. Filling in the gaps were crisscrossing tripwires of mint, leather, roasted nuts, caramelised sugar, and donkey droppings.

We wandered for hours, past herb carts and tottering horses and skittish cats and offerings of chewy nougat that wrapped around my molars. Fatima Zahra was rarely silent and always patient, encouraging my painstaking photography and pointing out fleeting details every few minutes that were invisible to my untrained eyes.

The travelling repairman with an iron in his hand. A low-set wooden barricade that begs passers-by to bow their heads in respect for Allah. Slots in the doors of mosques for inserting coins and asking God for forgiveness or good luck. An ancient clock in the side of a building, like a deconstructed sundial, that nobody knows how to read or how it once worked.

The famous water clock

These obscurities lend just a little clarity to Fez’s mystery, and are what Fatima Zahra seemed determined to highlight alongside established crowd pleasers like the tanneries and carpet shops.

One such obscurity I’d researched ahead of time, and a detour she was happy to incorporate, was a look inside one of Fez’s bakehouses: communal ovens where families take their trays of dough and have sent back to them as perfectly cooked bread and biscuits.

The bakers – similar to the dabbawallas of Mumbai – have a well-oiled system that remains enigmatic to outsiders. They can tell, just by looking at the dough, which family sent it, and have it delivered back to the family’s house when they’re done. Of course, this system can never be shared, as I learned when I had Fatima Zahra try and find out for me. It’s a secret, she explained.


The bakehouses embody what is simultaneously enchanting and intimidating about Fez. They’ll lure you close with trays of tantalising goods, carried by exquisitely clad women. They’ll exhale hot, toasty plumes into the streets that stop you in your tracks. They’ll sometimes let you taste or take a picture of the magic – sometimes not.

But they’ll never reveal their secret formula.


I’m impressed by Fez’s strong virtues of community and devotion. I’m captivated with its inexplicable retention of time, ever present in the souks and centuries-old sandstone. I’m charmed by the few jovial local interactions I’ve had, facilitated by Fatima Zahra Hanafi – perhaps with those who’ve sensed I’m not a threat (or are willing to put up with my appalling French and Darija). And I’m looking forward to more. With time.

Inshallah.

Photo credit: Lauren Crabbe

Lauren is an Australian photo-journalist who is joining The View From Fez team to cover the Fes Festival of World Sacred Music

Fatima Zahra Hanafi is a registered tour guide. She can be contacted at tourswithzahra@gmail.com

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Friday, June 08, 2018

Free Photography Workshop in Fez


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Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Photo of the Day - Yarran Cavalier

A dramatic overload on the road to Ouazazate! Photo by Yarran Cavalier
(Click on image to enlarge)
See more in our series Photo of the Day 


The View from Fez welcomes contributions to our Photo of the Day Series

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Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Moroccan Photo of the Day - Bryan Dawe

Dawn in Fez - A moody view of a section of the Fez Medina - photo by Bryan Dawe
(Click on image to enlarge)

See more in our series Photo of the Day 


The View from Fez welcomes contributions to our Photo of the Day Series

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Thursday, May 03, 2018

FREE PHOTO TUITION IN FEZ



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Monday, April 30, 2018

Moroccan Photo of the Day - Bryan Dawe


Fez Morning is the work of photographer, artist and satirist, Bryan Dawe
(Click on image to enlarge)

See more in our series Photo of the Day 


The View from Fez welcomes contributions to our Photo of the Day Series

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Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Night Photography in Fez - March 18th

Click in image to enlarge


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Saturday, March 03, 2018

Photography Documentary - Sunday March 4



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Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Philippe Laleu Exhibition - Don't Miss it!



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Friday, January 12, 2018

Slideluck 3 in Fez


As part of the Fez Gathering of International Artists, the third Slideluck evening was held in the new venue - the Medina Social Club. Slideluck has been held in more than 80 cities around the world. It is run by a non profit organisation which is dedicated to building and strengthening community through food and art


The idea is to bring together diverse groups of people, artwork, food, ideas and perspectives under one roof - with the aim of creating a unique and magical event - and once again the formula worked well in Fez.


The Medina Social Club was an ideal venue and the event well attended with an enthusiastic crowd. After eating, the audience took their seats and the show began.

 
The curated show gave a diverse offering of work produced in locations around the world - from the poverty of individuals in the Siberian landscape to textile workers in India, to a couple of interesting mini-documentaries on the work of photo-journalists.

The overall impression was of a well curated show that left the audience wondering when Slideluck 4 would show up in Fez.


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Photo: Winter Cafe in Fez


The cold weather in Fez continues and the week ahead looks like more of the same - snow in the mountains and rain on the plains. Temperatures in the Medina will range between lows of around 4 degrees and tops of 14 or 15 Celsius



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Saturday, November 25, 2017

Free Photography Workshop in Fez

P h o t o g r a p h y T a l k  - I s h m a e l C l a x t o n

Sunday, November 26 at 6:30 PM at the ALIF RIAD


In this session Ishmael Claxton, a photographer based in New York City, with a background in math, art history, history, set and costume design,  will explain how he's able to weave all of these elements together to give form to his vision.

Join fellow photographers for this exciting opportunity to meet with other photographers, exchange ideas, and learn more about photography.

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Thursday, November 23, 2017

Photographic Exhibition in Fez


The DRUNK LIGHT OF THE BOOK  - Thami Benkirane - photographer.  Opens on Friday, November 24, 6:30 p.m at the Gallery of the French Institute of Fez.

Exhibition from 24 November to 31 December  - Free entry
"According to Sartre, the book is a" set of dry leaves or when a large form moving: reading. " A closed book and placed in the shelves of a library is a closed room, locked and dark. Just like the darkroom of a hermetically sealed camera to light.
This free photo series entitled "drunk light of the book" results from experimental work that is in the wake practices that fall under the "artist's book"

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Friday, November 10, 2017

Street Photography Workshop in Fez



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Friday, November 03, 2017

Photo Essay - The Tradesmen of Tangier

Notes from Tradesmen in Tangier - a photo essay by Mohamed Zefzaf

Here are glimpses of tradesmen in Tangier, Morocco. Though unknown, the, like millions of their counterparts around the world, make our daily life better for their skills, their dedication, and a rare and earthy appreciation for living in the present moment. Most of them spend their entire existence in splendid obscurity. They are hardly recognised, much less celebrated. In this digitally globalised world, these good people are left behind, without the salaries or rights, equal to the true value of their labor. It is among these salt of the earth folks that one finds fraternity and wisdom. The fruit of their work is not cloud-based, but can be seen, and touched. It is true, and makes a difference.

Youssef
 
I want to make people’s home what they wanted it to be. I am just here to help-that is my work.

Youssef, upholster 32, of Youssef Décor at B’ni Makada-a perfectionist, full of life, with a penchant for Briouats and ketchup, working his way slowly, steadily, and honestly.  

Ayyad

Ayyad, 54-also known as the Boss: nominally a plasterer, but really a jack-of-all-trades; a man of skills and a bon vivant.

My best reward is to see my customers happy-then, I am happy too.

Anis & Adil

 When people call us, most have tried everything themselves. So we are the last resort. We love to see their faces when we actually fix their appliances. For us, the challenge of the work is in finding a solution to a problem. We’re logical people.

Anas 19, and Adil, 38, repair technicians, with a mentor-disciple relationship; they ride around Tangier in a motorcycle, often forgetting to wear their helmets. They fix all sorts of appliances, from leaking faucets to wash machines, and everything in between.

Si Ahmed

There’s order in masonry; there’s precision and alignment. It is practically following nature. I am a simple Moroccan man, I just build homes for people, and my work is honest and lasting. It will be around for hundreds of years.

Si Ahmed, mason, 54: a man of precise habits, mathematical in nature and a veteran of the Moroccan Army.

Abdelhadi

 It’s not easy, but the only way I understand how to make progress is to work hard. I want to see my children have a good future in this Morocco of ours. Despite all, I am an optimist. For me, that is the way to be.

Abdelhadi: 37, House painter, a father of three, making a journey in this life.  

Edited comments and Photos by M. Zefzaf

Mohamed Zefzaf is a Professor of English & Storyteller at the Massachusetts Bay Community College/USA


THE VIEW FROM FEZ WELCOMES CONTRIBUTIONS FROM OUR READERS 

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