10-03-2009 Interview Democratic Republic of the Congo: a photographer’s view For a month in 2008, Carl de Keyzer, a member of Magnum Photos, was embedded in the ICRC teams in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In the east of the country, where tens of thousands of people have had to flee from the fighting, this famous photographer observed the daily life of displaced persons and local communities. Here he looks back on his experiences.
©ICRC/O. Miltcheva
I was surprised to see that people still manage to retain an incredible joie de vivre. When you visit these places, it is as if nothing has happened. People agree to be photographed, perhaps all too easily. I admit that I felt a bit guilty about intruding into their private lives like this.
Carl de Keyzer is a Belgian photographer of world renown. Since 1994 he has been one of a very small circle of members of the cooperative Magnum Photos, a photography agency, which is an international benchmark.
Nine books, numerous exhibitions and some prestigious awards punctuate Carl de Keyzer’s biography. His works, which are far from sensationalist journalism, emphasize the historic and dramatic dimensions lurking behind the most ordinary scenes of life. .
In 2004, “Zona” a set of photographs showing prison camps in Siberia was exhibited in the International Museum of the Red Cross in Geneva.
www.carldekeyzer.com It is hard to do this with a single photo. Moreover there is a certain style of “humanitarian” photos which are generally intended to accompany fund-raising drives. I work differently and I tend to engage in long-term projects. I prefer to stay in a country for a longish period in order to get a better feeling of what is going on there. I prefer complex images because they reflect the complexity of life itself. My approach diverges substantially from that of press photographers – many of whom I respect. Press photographers generally spend much less time on the spot, one or two weeks for example. Their journey is expensive and they are under press from the media to return with pictures that “will sell”. So what do they do? They visit refugee camps and want to photograph combatants. They are looking for images with an immediate visual impact that will shock the public.
©ICRC/O. Miltcheva
I like visitors to my exhibitions to ask questions on leaving them. Journalistic photos are quickly forgotten. That is the big difference. My projects are more like essays, novels or films. I am not an illustrator. On the other hand, for the ICRC I took more objective photos than those in my artistic work. I confined myself to the documentary style, because if I started to “play around”, it might have been misunderstood. The main thing is not to fall prey to the conflict oneself. Clashes are constantly taking place in the east of the DRC where a lot of people carry weapons. But a photographer must ignore these concerns, or he cannot work. You can’t think for the whole time that you are travelling between Goma and Masis that you could be attacked by armed groups. |