February 16, 2008

« Go to previous entry | Home | Go to next entry »

The Khmer Chronicles / Issue Nr 6: You've got 5 minutes

John Vink


KhmerNuon Chea, Brother Nr 2 under the Khmer Rouge regime, had his first hearing at the pre trial chambers of the ECCC to examine his appeal for his provisional detention. The press officers of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal, just to keep things orderly, and on request of the judges who felt that a mob of camera wielding journalists was intimidating for the elderly accused, decided to allow only 5 photographers, working for a pool, and two cameramen to take pictures inside the courtroom during 5 minutes, just before and during the entrance of the judges.


Cambodia. Kambol (Phnom Penh). 4/02/2008: Mr. NUON Chea, 81yrs, former Brother Nr 2 during the Khmer Rouge Regime, in front of his judges at his first appearance at the pre-trial chambers of the ECCC (Extraordinary Chambers at the Courts of Cambodia). © John Vink/Magnum Photos

I was lucky, together with my khmer colleagues Tang Chhin Sothy, Chor Sokunthea, Mak Remissa and Heng Sinith, representing AFP, Reuters, EPA, AP, to be allowed in (was it because my permanent accreditation to the Chambers bears the number 001?). We know each other, have had each others elbows in our ribs on numerous occasions, bumped our lenses often and get along pretty well. Partly because we do help each other once in a while and partly because they know that Magnum is no real competition for them. Having their picture on the screen of the redactions one minute before the other agencies is vital whereas Magnum chugs along several hours later anyhow...

So what can one do to stand out? What difference can you make (in 5 minutes and with a 35mm only)? Well not much really... Especially because you're in a pool, so you HAVE to deliver or you will not be selected next time. The photographers outside are waiting to pick their choice in what's going to be available on the ECCC computer and they'd be more than willing to take your place.

Basically I start by making sure there is at least ONE usable picture. No risk taking... Autofocus, straight flash, no fancy composition, the accused smack in the middle of the frame, 5 or six shots. That's it... Switch to the M8, ambient light (the last firmware update finally delivers acceptable white balance results), 320 ISO (too much noise higher up), 2.8, 30th/ second and MOVE, change position, go to the back of the pack, slide to the right, push back into the pack again, move back and go to the left where the judges are, go straight back towards the accused, frame, focus and... finished. It's over. The 5 minutes are gone. We're politely asked by the security guards to leave the room... Hoping we didn't screw up and that there is something a little different to show. There are about 60 frames on my cards, 40 of which are really useless.

Links:
» The Khmer Chronicles / Issue Nr 1: UNICEF in Cambodia
» The Khmer Chronicles / Issue Nr 2: Can Cultural Identity go private?
» The Khmer Chronicles / Issue Nr 3: Arrest of Ieng Sary
» The Khmer Chronicles / Issue Nr 4: Gathering Pace
» The Khmer Chronicles / Issue Nr 5: Development is on the doorstep...
» John Vink's website
» John Vink's Magnum portfolio
» John Vink's Magnum In Motion story "Terre Rouge"
» John Vink's feature: Cambodia Khmer Rouge Trial

Posted in Behind the project | RSS feedCategory RSS feed

E-Mail this | Print | Add to Add this post to: del.icio.us Furl digg Spurl Yahoo MyWeb

« Go to previous entry | Home | Go to next entry »

To top


Reader comments (7)

RSS feedSubscribe to this article's comments via RSS

John:

this will be quick, as Im writing up a long comment to post under Chris' story on M.Romney....and all the attack the pics received....

anyway, i love the sequence of images 2-6.....

and the last ic, #6(!!!) reminds me of Pinkhassov :)))))):

more words later...have to get back to writing ;)

cheers

Comment posted by Bob Black on February 16, 2008

John:

sorry, I forgot to add (briefly) that besides the extraordinary sequence of pic #4, 5 and 6 (really, this is an extraordinary pic, given the quotidian appearance of it, really, im not bugging out when i said it reminds of Pinkhassov's pic too ), is the odd appearance of brother nr2:

he appears like a wax figure, a buddha, or all those odditiies in Madame Trousseau's museum.....

that is still, to me, the remarkable quality of the series about the Khmer Rouge Trial coverage....they are so strange, odd, "plain", all that horror that was perpetrayed by these silent wax figures....and the trial coverage pics so clearly and heart-breakingly juxtaposed against all ur pics of the Cambodians, the pics from the places where the death squads operated, the ponds and rivers and weeds, the environmental shots...it's hard to process...

and i think it takes a lot of guts not to over sensationalize (photographically) these trials...in fact, to me, theyve always been as much a commentary on the trial and the coverage (all the photographers and videographers) as much as those being held to bare....

the only thing i miss in these 6 pics in one of your Vink fans in the foreground ;)))))....

keep us up to speed....

cheers John

running
bob

Comment posted by Bob Black on February 16, 2008

Love pictures as it is, like dogma photo!

Comment posted by Sean Bodin on February 17, 2008

John,

Thanks for the detail! Fascinating to hear how you approached those 5mins.. right down to the iso and shutter speed! Great to know the story behind the photo...

All the best,

Elliot

Comment posted by Elliot on February 17, 2008

I'd expected a much more close-up shot. Related to the question what to do with mass murderers when they're old.

Comment posted by peter on February 21, 2008

Peter, usually when I'm too far away I use my legs to get closer instead of a zoom. Obviously my working method has limitations when there are a red rope held by fake-gold plated stands and security guards between the subject and me.

Although in this case I really felt I was close enough... Is it fear of contamination? But I feel uncomfortable getting physically too close to someone who is accused of crimes against humanity. Even under custody of the law there is a weird sense of power still perspiring from the man.

Comment posted by John Vink on February 21, 2008

i thought that it was ok but it was kind of boring and you could have made it better

Comment posted by kyle on March 5, 2008

Post a comment

(required)

(required but not published)

(required)

RSS feedSubscribe to this article's comments via RSS

Or browse the Archive for all articles and sections.

Notifications:

Sign up to get notified via E-Mail of every new article posted on the Magnum Blog.

RSS feedSubscribe to the Magnum Blog RSS feed



Access To Life

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and Magnum Photos teamed up to produce a major photographic commission.
In Access To Life, eigth Magnum photographers portray thirty people in nine countries around the world before and four months after they began antiretroviral treatment for AIDS.

Visit the Access To Life website

More articles:


Cornell Capa 1918-2008
Martin Fuchs

Cornell Capa was born Cornell Friedmann to a Jewish family in Budapest. In 1936 he moved to Paris, where his brother Andre (Robert Capa) was working as a photojournalist. He worked as his brother's printer until 1937, then moved to New York to join the new Pix photo agency. In 1938 he began working in the Life darkroom. Soon his first photo-story - on the New York World's Fair - was published in Picture Post.


The Khmer Chronicles / Issue Nr 9: About ethics and corruption rankings
John Vink

There was a time when Cambodia was not even listed on Transparency International's Corruption Perception index. But Cambodia is more and more part of the...


Larry Towell's Indecisive Moments Documentary
Martin Fuchs

Larry Towell is a photojournalist who travels reluctantly and only when the subject really matters. But if he travels he does so to really follow his subjects around for a long time, he tells a story from a very humanistic point of view adding his own unique perspective. From 1993 to 2006 he photographed in Israel and Palestine, producing an immense body of work. Two amazing books, "Then Palestine" and "No Man's Land", arose out of this work.


Auto Crazy
Martin Parr

China. Beijing. The Beijing Motor Show. 2008. © Martin Parr/Magnum Photos I am in a taxi, stuck in a big traffic jam. I am...


Find more articles in the Archive.

Categories:

Behind the image
What happened as the shutter clicked

Behind the project
The bigger story behind a project

Conversations
A loose series of conversations with photographers, editors and industry professionals

Educational
Educational content concerning Magnum workshops and other offers

From the field
Stories from around the world

Inside Magnum
Stories from the people who work at Magnum

Magnum Books
Stories around Magnum books

Miscellaneous
Miscellaneous blog articles and announcements

Photo of the week
One photo every week and almost no text

Understanding the trade
From magazines to galleries, photographs' many lives

Recent Comments:

A short conversation with the new Magnum nominees Olivia Arthur and Peter van Agtmael (21)
Comment by tomé

Cornell Capa 1918-2008 (29)
Comment by Alexander Kouznetsov

The Access to Life Campaign (15)
Comment by bram antareja

Larry Towell's Indecisive Moments Documentary (10)
Comment by glenn capers

Magnum Magnum: Chien-Chi Chang by Bruce Davidson (8)
Comment by gerard crewdson

Authors:

Alec Soth, Ann Tornkvist, Ben Shneiderman, Bjarke Myrthu, Bruce Davidson, Bruce Gilden, Chien-Chi Chang, Chris Steele-Perkins, Claudia Guadarrama, Claudine Boeglin, Constantine Manos, Daniel Power, Elliott Erwitt, Frank Smyth, Geert Van Kesteren, Inge Bondi, Jörg M. Colberg, Jessica Dimmock, John Vink, Jonas Bendiksen, Magnum Photos, Malaria No More, Martin Fuchs, Martin Parr, Martine Franck, Matthew Murphy, Meagan Young, Pablo Inirio, Paolo Pellegrin, Patrick Zachmann, Peter Marlow, Pia Frankenberg, Reiner Holzemer, Simon Wheatley, Stephen Bulger, Stuart Franklin, Artprice.com,

For more information on every author visit the Authors page.

Blog Home | Archive | Authors | Links | Blog Policy

© 2008 Magnum Photos. All rights reserved.
Duplication of any material on this site without author's consent and attribution is expressly prohibited.

RSS feedSubscribe to the Magnum Blog RSS feed