“We are Photographers” is a multimedia exploration of the role that photography plays in the lives of youth around the world. Last summer, students from SF Camerawork’s First Exposures program traveled to Ghana to explore commonalities across cultures through an exchange with the Ghana Youth Photo Project. This visual collaboration looks at young people’s lives in San Francisco, CA and Accra, Ghana. As a extension of the exhibition, United in Nima, the project made it’s debut in March 2009. For more information please visit http://www.sfcamerawork.org
“We are Photographers” is a multimedia exploration of the role that photography plays in the lives of youth around the world. Last summer, students from SF Camerawork’s First Exposures program traveled to Ghana to explore commonalities across cultures through an exchange with the Ghana Youth Photo Project. This visual collaboration looks at young people’s lives in San Francisco, CA and Accra, Ghana. As a extension of the exhibition, United in Nima, the project made it’s debut in March 2009. For more information please visit http://www.sfcamerawork.org
This digital story explores the distance between the filmmaker’s life in New York City and his past in China: the same sky above us and a different world below.
This is a piece based on a poem we wrote together as a group. Though there are many ways Boston is described, we wanted to represent the neighborhoods that we are from and our experiences. What we see, hear, touch, and smell in our neighborhoods.
“We are Photographers” is a multimedia exploration of the role that photography plays in the lives of youth around the world. Last summer, students from SF Camerawork’s First Exposures program traveled to Ghana to explore commonalities across cultures thr…
In this Flash animation, students from Ridgemont High School are showing the diversity of their school by rotoscoping all the ethnic dances preformed during last year’s talent show.
As part of an Adobe Youth Voices public service announcement project, students in Robin Lambert's and Patty Smith's classes explored a variety of topics important to them and produced over 20 PSAs on stereotypes, depression, gangs, the environment, and other subjects.