Category: photojournalism

Large meeting at Piata Revolutiei

If in the previous days the pro-democratic and anti-governmental demonstrations at Piața Victoriei were spontaneous and unofficial, yesterday evening Piața Revoluției of Bucharest (the symbolic place where the old communist dictatorship ended) hosted a big official demonstration with thousands of participants. This time it was a political action, with parties, associations, organizations and personalities participating and announcing an alliance intended to stop the coup d’etat and defending democracy. They will lack much power in the following months, but are expected to be a force in the upcoming elections expected this autumn.

piata revolutiei
piata revolutiei
piata revolutiei
piata revolutiei

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In the streets again

The Romanian parliamentary coup d’etat is continuing in full force, now it moved to the removal of the democratically elected President of the state – that is in theory a constitutional move, but not in the way it is happening now, with a governmental (not even a law!) restricting the Constitutional Court ability to pronounce over the impeachment and a following law (or maybe even a governmental order again) to modify the referendum law (since a referendum should follow). On top of that, the Senate president was replaced a day before, since him will be the acting president while the elected president is suspended.

Therefore, the civil society reacted again. I am not good with estimated a crowd size, but my guess is the protesters in Piata Victoriei yesterday evening were double in number compared with the previous day. And their message wittier, I especially liked “The Higgs boson was discovered. Politicians, why you don’t let us live?”. Proportionally, the number of photos in my post increased (and there are even more in an online album).

This evening a really big protest is expected from 18:00 in Piata Revolutiei, the place where the anti-communist revolution started in December 1989. I will be there.

jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta
jos ponta

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Coup d’etat in Romania

Life was going “normal” I was busy preparing the Wikipedia photography contest, editing photos for an exhibition with my photo group, queuing posts for this blog, planning trips for the summer and so on, when the crude reality hit: a communist government in place in Romania which got into power after some parliamentary play that modified the majority, moved into what can be called a “parliamentary coup d’etat”, which demolished democratic institutions like People’s Advocate or the Parliament leadership and free media like the public television and is targeting now other institutions like the Constitutional Court and the (democratically elected) President, with Justice to follow. The life can’t go on, I have to stop and document how people are trying to protect democracy and freedom, they get out in the streets protesting.

anticommunist
anticommunist
anticommunist
anticommunist
anticommunist
anticommunist
anticommunist
anticommunist
anticommunist
anticommunist

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Femininity / Feminism

Femininity is when women are treated like delicate, beautiful creatures. Feminism is when some of them ask to be equal to men.

feminism

Still, in the gypsy horseshoe maker community, it seems to be different, the stronger to the heavier work.

feminism

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For a better life

The cart hood is a plastic from the Carrefour supermarkets commercials and it says (in Romanian) “for a better life” (“pentru o viața mai bună”). The cart is emblematic, since the gipsies here are nomads, they travel the land using those (and have a real house inside).

gipsy

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Horseshoe making

This is a story about making horseshoes, it happens in a common Romanian village, at its side, in the part inhabited by the gipsy community.

gipsy

Is about taking the raw steel and with the help of the fire, just like the ancient god Vulcan, and making it into shapes.

gipsy

The hero is no god, but a simple, humble man:

gipsy

Still, he has the power over the fire and steel

gipsy

And this is how horseshoes are made.

gipsy

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Wilhelmina Arz at Femei pe Matasari

Even if it was only the second edition, it seems like a tradition became for Femei pe Mătăsari urban festival to be opened by a fashion show by Wilhelmina Arz. It take place in the evening before, on a stage built on the street, where the next day people will roam.

matasari
matasari
matasari
matasari
matasari

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Real Matasari

Every event, no matter how glamourous it is, must have a sordid side, like this moment of real live on Mătăsari street (is happening just in front of the concert stage).

matasari

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No to fundamentalism

One of the attractions at Femei pe Mătăsari was a run in high heels, at which everyone was accepted (including guys) with a single condition: to wear high heels. Not even the height was an issue, participants were split in groups based on the heel size.

high heels

In the middle of this was also a small group of feminist fundamentalists, protesting and calling such thing “sexist”. They were a few and people pretty much ignored them, initially I didn’t even thought about taking a picture of their group, but when noticed I accidentally have one changed my mind, better talk about issues than keeping them covered.

high heels

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Hipsters on Matasari

If the premier hipster event in Bucharest is Street Delivery, there had to be a copycat, that’s what hipsters do, copy the “alternative” things. Happening only a week after, Femei pe Mătăsari (Women on Matasari) has pretty much the same feel with Street Delivery, many of the booths are in both places, still this one is more commercial, there are a lot of sellers offering their hand-made wares, from clothes to earrings to cupcakes. At they don’t even have beer, only radler.

matasari
matasari
matasari
matasari

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Hipster Delivery

Street Delivery is the biggest hipster event taking place in Bucharest and it takes place in the middle of June, the perfect moment for a hipster to show his true colors with the obligatory hat and scarf during an incredibly hot summer day. It has everything you expect from such an event, from “Salvati Rosia Montana” to graffiti and comics to cotton candy to and beer to workshops and to dubstep. Even a booth from the local Apple Computer distributor was there.

And since the Carturesti library chain thought is a good promotional opportunity, they, as organizer, held a photography contest from the event, so about half of the hipsters there had a camera, dreaming of taking “that” picture and winning the contest. So I took only a few pics.

street delivery
street delivery
street delivery
street delivery
street delivery

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My photos in Cancan (no license, no credit, no nothing)

Cancan is one of the most known local tabloids focusing on celebrities and such stuff (to judge its level, the article I am talking about here is about a Facebook fight between a dancer and the nephew of a rich guy) and I just discovered back this January they used a couple of my photos for an article, here’s a screen capture from their website:

cancan

Obviously, they had no legal right to post them, neither from the photographer (me), nor the model (Alicia), it looks like they just lifted the images from a Facebook album of mine (stupid them, they could have obtained better quality from the g+ equivalent album) (the model has also a copy, but she put on her profile only one of the two images used by the tabloid).

On the legal side, the photos on Facebook are just put there, so they are full protected by copyright, according with the Romanian law. On Picasaweb/Google Plus, where there is such an option, I have put them under Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike, which still require an user (Cancan in this case) to credit the author and keep the license. Is true I did a mistake: forgot to add a watermark, which I do with images like this which are likely to be misuses, but the presence of a watermark was no influence on the law and copyright (copyright is applied by default) and the tabloid modified the crop anyway. They act like everything is online is free to use, which is false but used by other media outlets from the entire world.

So what I am doing next? Nothing, I won’t sue the tabloid (probably they expect that much, people to be busy with other things to sue them), but I will post the pictures here, for reference and for people to be able to see the original, compared with the tabloid editing. I do like to share content and I do it all the time, but under the rules I want, which means most of the time a Free license.

alicia
alicia

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Frames of Style, May 2012

After last november I assisted to the Frames of Style first edition, now this fusion event, consisting mainly by fashion, but also including contemporary art, interior design and video art, had a second edition. The first fashion presentation was a collection by Sandra Chira:

frames of style
frames of style

Then followed a collection designed by Sandra Galan:

frames of style
frames of style

The fashion show closed with a collection designed by Irina Irimia and featuring accessories by Ashley Scott:

frames of style
frames of style

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Vienna: ceremony

Walking around the city of Vienna, by chance we saw the Volkstheater where a ceremony happened: the Amadeus Austrian Music Awards. So grabbed the camera and played paparazzi for a bit.

amadeus
amadeus
amadeus

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Final/Fans/Football

Yesterday evening Bucharest hosted the Europa League final, a match between two Spanish teams, Atletico Madrid and Athletic Bilbao, so the old city (the Lipscani area) was practically under invasion by happy people singing, dancing, screaming and drinking. Is hard to say which is which, since both teams have the same colors: red and white stripes (Bilbao may have also a bit of green, Madrid a bit of blue).

supporters
supporters
supporters
supporters
supporters
supporters

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