Chris Knipp
02-09-2005, 05:47 PM
Zana Briski and Ross Kauffman: Born into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids
Showing the world what poor kids can do
Review by Chris Knipp
This is what the Latin ideal of "dulce et utile" means: Born into Brothels is beautiful and charming but at the same time teaches and inspires.
Zana Briski escaped from boredom and frustration and found a mission. The London born photojournalist was tired of her job with the Baltimore Sun in the mid-Nineties, she told the LA Weekly recently: "'The Sun would have me shoot some woman who just finished a quilt. Or somebody’s cow,' she says. 'I was driving all the time. It was awful. And meanwhile, there were gang wars going on down the block. But they didn’t want to know about that.'" She quit her job at the beginning of 1995 and immediately flew to India.
Briski kept going back to Calcutta for seven years. Originally, she told LA Weekly, she went to study the life of prostitutes of Sonagachi, the red light district, inspired by a bond she felt with "Sister Ammachi, India’s 'hugging saint,' thought by some to be an incarnation of the Divine Mother of Hinduism," who " had donated land for a school for Sonagachi's children." A brothel owner let Briski live on the premises; she realized the area was full of children (as well as husbands and grannies), and when the kids grabbed at her camera, she started a photography class for eight ten- to thirteen-year-olds, four boys and four girls, and gave each one a point-and-shoot camera and film. They snapped everything, with as many different results as there were personalities. We get to know all of them: Avijit, Puja, Shanti, Gour, Manik and the rest are each clear individuals. They're very accessible, and many of their images showed ugliness and chaos, but also exuberance and brilliant garish color (the film is processed in a garish way too, and its look is wholly appropriate to the intensity of Indian city life).
It was a serious photography class. At this age, children are all natural born artists, and all produced good work, while a few showed special talent. At this age, they're also open and eager, and Briski, who managed to recruit her then boyfriend, New York (HBO) film editor Ross Kauffman, to help do a documentary about the group, realized she had to do something to give the kids a future. This led to an effort to get some of them into boarding schools so the boys would have lives and the girls wouldn't end up "in line," as the next generation of prostitutes.
This effort proved very difficult -- both families and red tape got in the way. But with others' help and her own persistence, four did enter schools, though most dropped out or were pulled out by their families. Handsome enlargements of the kid's work were exhibited locally and internationally from the first, and Amnesty International produced a calendar using them. The most talented boy, Avijit, got to go to Amsterdam for a conference of young photographers. (That wasn't easy either, but he did it.) Briski sold the prints successfully enough to start a school in Sonagachi that's opening two years from now and also to coordinate projects of "kids with cameras" in Haiti, Israel, and Egypt. The idea of uniting self-expression for the downtrodden with documentation for the world to see their lives is a brilliant, and yet wholly natural one.
It's astonishing how articulate the children are about their families, about their future prospects, about what they're doing with their cameras. Briski is a no-nonsense person: she treats the kids as equals, and when they are onscreen there's no sense of embarrassment or condescension , sentimentalizing or aestheticizing. If this world seems beautiful as well as ugly, that's the kids' doing.
Born into Brothels is simple. It works because it speaks through the kids. As the New York theatrical blurb pointed out, their class, with its critiques, editing sessions, and portfolio evaluations, was the kind of thing you'd expect on Manhattan's Upper West Side, but the material the kids had to work with is intense and unique. This is a rich and brave exploration of the possibilities of photography and ways of salvaging young lives in a socially "doomed" environment. The Indian musical accompaniment is so lively and catchy, you wonder if the whole story will shortly be made into a Bollywood spectacular.
This engrossing and appealing documentary had its US premiere in early December 2004 at Film Forum,where the children's enlarged color photographs graced the lobby and hallways.So far, the film has won 27 awards in 2004-2005, including the Sundance Film Festival Audience Award, Best Documentary at the National Board of Review and the LA Critics Awards, and an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary. There is a book published by Umbrage Editions and the film will be shown on HBO. In January and February 2005 it is having a series of screenings across the US and in Canada with accompanying photographic exhibitions and directors' appearances.
References:
LA Weekly http://www.laweekly.com/ink/printme.php?eid=60279
The book: http://www.kids-with-cameras.org/newsevents/?page=2004-12-06-bookrelease.incl
Special screenings: http://www.kids-with-cameras.org/newsevents/?page=2005-01-31-events.incl
Showing the world what poor kids can do
Review by Chris Knipp
This is what the Latin ideal of "dulce et utile" means: Born into Brothels is beautiful and charming but at the same time teaches and inspires.
Zana Briski escaped from boredom and frustration and found a mission. The London born photojournalist was tired of her job with the Baltimore Sun in the mid-Nineties, she told the LA Weekly recently: "'The Sun would have me shoot some woman who just finished a quilt. Or somebody’s cow,' she says. 'I was driving all the time. It was awful. And meanwhile, there were gang wars going on down the block. But they didn’t want to know about that.'" She quit her job at the beginning of 1995 and immediately flew to India.
Briski kept going back to Calcutta for seven years. Originally, she told LA Weekly, she went to study the life of prostitutes of Sonagachi, the red light district, inspired by a bond she felt with "Sister Ammachi, India’s 'hugging saint,' thought by some to be an incarnation of the Divine Mother of Hinduism," who " had donated land for a school for Sonagachi's children." A brothel owner let Briski live on the premises; she realized the area was full of children (as well as husbands and grannies), and when the kids grabbed at her camera, she started a photography class for eight ten- to thirteen-year-olds, four boys and four girls, and gave each one a point-and-shoot camera and film. They snapped everything, with as many different results as there were personalities. We get to know all of them: Avijit, Puja, Shanti, Gour, Manik and the rest are each clear individuals. They're very accessible, and many of their images showed ugliness and chaos, but also exuberance and brilliant garish color (the film is processed in a garish way too, and its look is wholly appropriate to the intensity of Indian city life).
It was a serious photography class. At this age, children are all natural born artists, and all produced good work, while a few showed special talent. At this age, they're also open and eager, and Briski, who managed to recruit her then boyfriend, New York (HBO) film editor Ross Kauffman, to help do a documentary about the group, realized she had to do something to give the kids a future. This led to an effort to get some of them into boarding schools so the boys would have lives and the girls wouldn't end up "in line," as the next generation of prostitutes.
This effort proved very difficult -- both families and red tape got in the way. But with others' help and her own persistence, four did enter schools, though most dropped out or were pulled out by their families. Handsome enlargements of the kid's work were exhibited locally and internationally from the first, and Amnesty International produced a calendar using them. The most talented boy, Avijit, got to go to Amsterdam for a conference of young photographers. (That wasn't easy either, but he did it.) Briski sold the prints successfully enough to start a school in Sonagachi that's opening two years from now and also to coordinate projects of "kids with cameras" in Haiti, Israel, and Egypt. The idea of uniting self-expression for the downtrodden with documentation for the world to see their lives is a brilliant, and yet wholly natural one.
It's astonishing how articulate the children are about their families, about their future prospects, about what they're doing with their cameras. Briski is a no-nonsense person: she treats the kids as equals, and when they are onscreen there's no sense of embarrassment or condescension , sentimentalizing or aestheticizing. If this world seems beautiful as well as ugly, that's the kids' doing.
Born into Brothels is simple. It works because it speaks through the kids. As the New York theatrical blurb pointed out, their class, with its critiques, editing sessions, and portfolio evaluations, was the kind of thing you'd expect on Manhattan's Upper West Side, but the material the kids had to work with is intense and unique. This is a rich and brave exploration of the possibilities of photography and ways of salvaging young lives in a socially "doomed" environment. The Indian musical accompaniment is so lively and catchy, you wonder if the whole story will shortly be made into a Bollywood spectacular.
This engrossing and appealing documentary had its US premiere in early December 2004 at Film Forum,where the children's enlarged color photographs graced the lobby and hallways.So far, the film has won 27 awards in 2004-2005, including the Sundance Film Festival Audience Award, Best Documentary at the National Board of Review and the LA Critics Awards, and an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary. There is a book published by Umbrage Editions and the film will be shown on HBO. In January and February 2005 it is having a series of screenings across the US and in Canada with accompanying photographic exhibitions and directors' appearances.
References:
LA Weekly http://www.laweekly.com/ink/printme.php?eid=60279
The book: http://www.kids-with-cameras.org/newsevents/?page=2004-12-06-bookrelease.incl
Special screenings: http://www.kids-with-cameras.org/newsevents/?page=2005-01-31-events.incl