HAVE
you ever thought of how your copy of a daily newspaper comes into your
hands? Or how a flat tire returns to normal so you can drive your
vehicle again?
If
you need a haircut or makeover, a visit to the beauty parlor solves it
all. If you need to get around the island and you have no car, there are
taxis to take you to your destination. Go to a store and a salesclerk
will be there to assist you.
Each of these everyday things that we all take for granted are possible because of real people with real lives.
For two weeks in August last year,
renowned photographer and historian Dr. Dirk Spennemann made the rounds
observing and capturing people from all walks of life on Saipan, Tinian
and Guam, freezing moments of everyday life.
Spennemann covered a wide variety of subjects documenting the daily lives of people in the Marianas, both at work and at play.
All these moments are now available for
free viewing in the exhibit “Marianas Wide,” which opened on Wednesday
night at the CNMI Museum of History and Culture on Middle Road in
Garapan.
Go over the images and see for yourself
how Spennemann captured the everyday stories in stores, churches, the
night market, tourist sites, farms and a scrap metal shop, as well as
other work places, at the cultural center and historical sites. You will
meet familiar faces in these powerful images.
They tell stories about life and people
in the Marianas. Spennemann crossed borders and cultural barriers in
these snap shots, capturing Chamorros, Carolinians, Koreans, Japanese,
Bangladeshis, Filipinos, Chinese and other islanders in Micronesia.
These images will be valuable parts of
the history of the islands, giving future generations glimpses of what
life was in the Marianas in the early years of the 21st century.
Spennemann is an Australia-based
photographer whose work explores the interaction of cultural expression,
landscape and human experience through the medium of photography. He is
associate professor of cultural heritage studies at Charles Sturt
University in Albury, Australia.
Spennemann used a vintage 1960s Panon
Widelux — one of those Japanese 35mm film cameras designed to reproduce a
panoramic image covering 120 degrees, the same breadth of vision that
the human eye normally sees.
Spennemann’s photographs have been
exhibited in museums and galleries in Australia, Alaska, California and
Saipan. Visit http://www.ausphoto.net to see more of Spennemann’s
images.
Photographers, historians and community
members attended yesterday’s opening of the exhibit, which will run
until July 13. For more information, call the CNMI Museum at 664-2160.
First published HERE
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