No Olho da Rua (In the Eye of the Street) ARCHIVE #05 - Rosemary's Cars
Julian Germain, Patricia Azevedo, Murilo Godoy
Regular price
$18.00
Sale
The images show people reacting to Rosemary, an obviously homeless person with a camera. A series of encounters, some deeply uncomfortable, some angry, others weary, others warm and friendly, some fascinating in the sense that the subjects genuinely participate in a process of ‘portraiture’.
Rosemary was a new arrival to the
No Olho da Rua project in 2005, a diminutive and timid figure on the periphery of the noise, energy and mayhem that prevailed, but it quickly became clear she was extremely bold with photography. As well as photographing her own street community she made lots of pictures of ‘ordinary’ people. Close-up pictures and portraits of passers-by, in and around the nearby shops, street vendors and bus stops, some of which may well appear in a later ‘zine! She also photographed people in cars; sometimes parked, sometimes driving by, mostly waiting at the multiple traffic lights at the busy junction adjacent to a spectacular gameleira tree around which the group gathered every day.
It's not clear what motivated her. Someone in the group said she was selling pictures to the people she’d photographed, their regular commute bringing them to a stop at the same traffic lights a day or two later, where Rosemary was ready with the prints + a demand for a couple of R$. Or perhaps, for her, being a ‘photographer’ temporarily lifted her off the street, giving her an opportunity to engage with people from a different, more interesting and equitable perspective. It’s impossible to know, but also in the archive are a couple of photographs of Rosemary making these pictures and it seems she is happy in this work.
Limited Edition of 200 per edition
21 X 15cm
In 1995, artists Julian Germain (UK), Patricia Azevedo and Murilo Godoy (BR) began working on No Olho da Rua (In the Eye of the Street) in the Brazilian city of Belo Horizonte. Their proposal was to put cameras into the hands of street children, young people living chaotic lives on the margins of society who had rarely, if ever, been photographed or made pictures themselves. The idea was not to offer them ‘supervised’ access to photography, but to give them freedom to independently make their own pictures, of anything they wanted, where and when they chose. Fifty young people were given the most basic plastic point and shoot cameras and shown how to use them. From the outset they not only got enormous pleasure from photography, they also produced astonishing images, and as a result, the project has continued ever since, albeit on a sporadic and occasional basis as and when resources have allowed.