Click on the two links below for 2011 photography expeditions. Taking registrations now for
2011 Day of the Dead Photography Expedition and
Summer 2011 Oaxaca Photography Expedition: Market Towns and Artisan Villages.
COURSE DESCRIPTION–DAY OF THE DEAD PHOTO TRAVEL WORKSHOP: October 29-November 4, 2010. Explore the magic and mystery of Day of the Dead – a feast for the visual senses – a six-night, seven-day expedition that immerses you into the heart of Oaxaca, Mexico. During this annual religious and cultural festival the city vibrates with color, music, and Mardi Gras-like energy. You will travel with photographer and documentary filmmaker Linda Booker, and Oaxaca Cultural Navigator Norma Hawthorne to visit and document the food, religious symbols, people, cemeteries and family celebrations both in the city and in the rural Zapotec village of Teotitlan del Valle. By the end of the workshop, you will use your digital SLR camera for visual storytelling and cultural discovery.
This workshop is limited to six participants.
The workshop focuses on the use of color digital photography to capture, record and document the traditions and practices of this ancient pre-Hispanic celebration that has its roots in Aztec culture, mixed with Catholic ritual. During our week together, we will roam the markets where preparations for home altars and gravesites are made: an abundance of candles, chocolate, bread, candies, fruit, flowers, the favorite food and beverage of departed loved ones. We will visit the famed Xoxocotlan cemetery to capture elaborately decorated resting places and family revelers, meander city streets to come upon masked parades, visit homes, archeological sites, and enjoy a cooking demonstration.
This workshop is for beginning and intermediate-level amateur photographers who want to learn more about their digital SLR cameras and move more comfortably beyond the automatic setting. Topics covered include using natural light, composition, night-time photography, capturing emotion, focusing on details, and taking the time to set up your shot. Learning documentary-style photography is different from walking around and being a tourist! It means immersion, looking for opportunities to see things from the participant perspective. You’ll capture people in their natural state, experiment with rituals, family environments, and sense of place. During the workshop, you will review each other’s work, give feedback, encouragement and gentle critique, as we mix class instruction with being out on the streets.
About Your Workshop Instructor, Linda Booker
Linda Booker is a documentary filmmaker with a keen and creative eye. Linda’s recent documentary film, “Love Lived on Death Row,” has received high praise from lay and academic audiences when it screened at film festivals and universities across the country. She is the recipient of a grassroots community screening tour grant from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation and has produced documentary-style videos for North Carolina non-profits and musicians.
After graduating from Florida State University in Tallahassee with a degree in visual communications, Linda Booker spent the next thirteen years as a graphic designer and art director for major publications, including Yacht Vacations, Palm Beach Illustrated, Toy & Hobby World, and Triangle Business Report. As feature photographer for Yacht Vacations, she traveled to capture images that were published in the magazine. Her work and interests have taken her to Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Costa Rica, England, Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Grenada, and many locations throughout the United States.
In 2005, after completing the Certificate in Documentary Studies Program at Duke University (Durham, NC), Linda became founding president of By the Brook Productions. She created and coordinates the ChathamArts Sustainable Cinema Series, a highly regarded and innovative program, along with a local at-risk youth filmmaking program, Shooting4Change. Her Web site is: www.bythebrookfilms.com An example of the Shooting4Change project is at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlXbGGj1O6o
Preliminary Itinerary (subject to change)
Day One, Friday: Oaxaca. Meet at our hotel and gather for an early evening orientation, followed by a welcome dinner. (D)
Day Two, Saturday: Oaxaca. Meander Oaxaca on foot in the morning, visiting splendid churches and art galleries, photography, graphics arts museums, including Centro Fotographico Alvarez Bravo http://www.cfmab.blogspot.com/. After a group lunch, you will have the option to travel to the craft village of Arrazola to visit a famous wood carver or continue to explore Oaxaca on your own. Meet on the Zocalo for evening refreshments. Dinner on your own. (B,L)
Day Three, Sunday: Oaxaca. After an early breakfast, spend the morning at Abastos Market, then travel to Monte Alban, the extraordinary Zapotec archeological site, followed by an afternoon in the pottery village of Atzompa. At 7 p.m. we will depart for the majestic Xoxocotlan Panteon (cemetery) for an incredible Day of the Dead experience. This is a very late evening; we may be out until at least midnight. Perfect for night photography. Dinner on your own. (B,L)
Day Four, Monday: Teotitlan del Valle. Morning is on your own after breakfast. Depart at noon to Teotitlan del Valle and check-in at your bed and breakfast. Lunch in the village. Afternoon visit to the home of Federico Chavez Sosa and his wife Dolores Santiago Arrellanas, for a rug weaving and natural dyeing demonstration, followed by a visit to famed painter Pantaleon Ruiz Martinez for a discussion and demonstration of his art. Dinner on your own. (B, L)
Day Five, Tuesday: Before breakfast, walk to the local village market where Day of the Dead preparations unfold. After breakfast, travel to Mitla, late Zapotec-Mixtec archeological site and visit village weavers. After lunch, in the late afternoon, enjoy a special cooking demonstration. Walk to the village Panteon (cemetery) for Teotitlan observance. Group dinner optional. (B,L)
Day Six, Wednesday: After breakfast, enjoy the morning to explore the village and surrounding countryside or take a taxi to Oaxaca for a final day of shopping or sightseeing. This is a free day. We will meet for a farewell dinner either in Teotitlan or Oaxaca (group choice). (B, D)
Day Seven, Thursday: After breakfast, we say our goodbyes and depart.
What You Should Bring
1) Your energy and enthusiasm
2) Digital SLR camera
3) Laptop computer
4) Software for organizing and presenting images (such as Photoshop Express)
5) Batteries and battery charger
6) Memory card(s)
7) Pen and notepad
Plus, sturdy, comfortable walking shoes, sun protection, sun hat
(Upon registration, you will receive a complete packet and information guide with suggested packing list and other useful information.)
Lodging/Accommodations
To keep this trip affordable, we have selected accommodations that are clean and basic. For the first three nights in Oaxaca, all rooms will be shared, two people to a room; each room with private bath. The Oaxaca hotel is conveniently located one block from Santo Domingo Church in the central historic district and steps away from great shopping, restaurants, museums and galleries.
For the three nights in Teotitlan del Valle, you will have the option of having a double room with shared bath for the base price of the trip; single supplement with shared bath (add $100); shared room with private bath (add $200); single room with private bath (add $300). Please indicate your preference.
Cost: The basic cost for the trip is $1195.00 USD. This includes six nights lodging double occupancy, six breakfasts, five lunches, two dinners, transportation to villages and archeological sites, entry fees to ruins, and all instruction. Most travel workshops of this type and length cost more than twice as much!
It does NOT include airfare, taxes, gratuities, travel insurance, liquor/alcoholic beverages, some meals and transportation.
Reservations and Cancellations
A 50% deposit ($600) is required to guarantee your spot. The final payment for the balance due (including any supplemental costs) shall be postmarked by September 1, 2010. Payment may be made by check or PayPal. We will be happy to send you an itemized invoice.
If cancellation is necessary, please notify us in writing by email. After September 15, no refunds are possible; however, we will make every possible effort to fill your reserved space. If you cancel before September 1, we will refund 50% of your deposit or $300. If you cancel between September 1 and September 15, we will refund 50% of your registration, or $600. We strongly recommend that you take out trip cancellation, baggage, emergency evacuation and medical insurance before you begin your trip, since unforeseen circumstances are possible.
To register, contact: normahawthorne@mac.com or call (919) 274-6194
Please make your deposit payable to Oaxaca Cultural Navigator LLC, and mail it to: Norma Hawthorne, 110 Blue Heron Farm Rd., Pittsboro, NC 27312. Thank you.
This workshop is produced by Norma Hawthorne, Oaxaca Cultural Navigator LLC. For more information, see: https://oaxacaculture.com
‘Weaving a Curve’ Movie Just Accepted to 100 Mile Film Series–Short Shorts
ChathamArts in Pittsboro, North Carolina, holds a series of documentary film screenings that are produced and directed by people who live within 100 miles of the “epicenter” — Big Culture in a Tiny Town! That would be: Pittsboro. I submitted our short film (just under 6 minutes) to the Short Shorts screening and we were accepted! The series coordinator is Linda Booker, a distinguished NC documentary filmmaker.
The screening is Tuesday, July 28, 2009, 7:30 p.m. at the Fearrington Barn, Fearrington Village, Pittsboro, NC. You can find out more on the ChathamArts website www.chathamarts.org This will be the first time the film will be shown on the big screen.
The film tells the story of Federico Chavez Sosa, master weaver of Teotitlan del Valle, how he learned to weave and perfect making the curve using the two-pedal, two harness tapestry loom introduced by the Spaniards in 1521. Federico talks about what it means to him to be a weaver, combining the aesthetic and spiritual, the past and the present. In Spanish with English subtitles.
I wrote, produced and directed the film with my friend Eric Chavez Santiago who shares billing with me. Eric is the director of education at the textile museum in Oaxaca, and took the documentary filmmaking workshop with me in his village of Teotitlan del Valle last February. We both thought it would be a useful skill to know, and this has proven correct. Eric has gone on to make short documentaries of aging weavers, dyers, and spinners in remote villages of Oaxaca. I am now making a documentary at the UNC Chapel Hill School of Nursing about an innovative nursing research project that is looking into hunger and fullness feeding cues that infants and toddlers give to their parents and caregivers. If the cues are not recognized or are ignored, it is believed that this can result in early childhood obesity which could then lead to childhood type 2 diabetes.
Erica Rothman, our workshop instructor, repeatedly said that the goal of our documentary filmmaking workshop was to provide the skills to enable people to go back to their own communities and tell their unique stories through film. For me and Eric, I think we achieved this goal.
The next Oaxaca Filmmaking Workshop: Visual Storytelling is scheduled for February 19-26, 2010. If you are interested in attending, see the blog post for all the details or write me at normahawthorne@mac.com
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Posted in Cultural Commentary, Teotitlan del Valle, Workshops and Retreats
Tagged 100 Mile Film Series, documentary filmmaking, Erica Rothman, Linda Booker, NC, Pittsboro, Weaver Federico Chavez Sosa, Weaving a Curve movie