Carers Week: Coping with caring through photography

Carers Week: Coping with caring through photography

As Carers Week continues, we meet Fiona, a professional photographer from Salford who cares for her husband who has dementia. Using her photography to help her cope with her caring responsibilities, Fiona has been building a series of pictures that represent the range of emotions carers often feel.

Fiona is a member of a carers group at Age UK Salford and will continue working on the project, entitled Caregiving, over time. Below, she gives Enable readers a preview of the work.


I don’t like the term “carer”. I’m John’s wife and caring for him is something I do. It’s not who I am. 

However, I often feel that the care-giving role takes over everything, and its not clear who “I” am anymore. This photographic project is about the emotions associated with this role, and about reasserting my identity. Making the images has been a helpful way to work through some of these emotions, and express them to others. 

Caring is exhausting. It’s relentless 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. 

There are no holidays, no sick leave. The logistics of organising respite care are so complex. Then, even if someone else is looking after him, you still worry. 

Knowing what is best, and where to turn for help is confusing – and I’m not the person with the cognitive decline.

The routines and support that you can put in place are so fragile – the slightest change means they break down. 

So many tasks fall to me. As well as care, all the routines of running a home and all the driving around. Trying to juggle all this means that being John’s wife often gets buried under it all. 

We had some great times together. It’s so difficult to hold onto the memories of the past, and build the memories of the future together when one person can’t remember. 


Visit the dedicated Carers Week website to find out more about the campaign and how to get involved (www.carersweek.org), or speak to Carers UK about accessing resources and support (www.carersuk.org, 0808 808 7777).

All images © : Fiona Robinson/Photos With Fiona


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World’s Largest Strawberry Sculpture: world record in Strawberry Point, Iowa

World’s Largest Strawberry Sculpture: world record in Strawberry Point, Iowa
Strawberry Point, Iowa, United States–Strawberry Point, Iowa is billed as “The Sweetest Place to Grow”; they have a roadside attraction dedicated to their sweet namesake that grows far beyond normal size: a fifteen-foot tall, twelve-foot wide fiberglass strawberry that was designed by a local ad agency in the late 1960s to put this Clayton County locale on the map and sets the world record for being the World’s Largest Strawberry Sculpture, according to the WORLD RECORD ACADEMY: https://shorturl.at/ktFJ5

June Happenings At Socrates Sculpture Park

June Happenings At Socrates Sculpture Park
The official start of summer is a few weeks away, but June is bringing warm weather and new sights, sounds, tastes, and more to Socrates Sculpture Park. Our new exhibition ‘Mary Mattingly: Ebb of a Spring Tide’ is open! Experience the Water Clock, a 65-foot living sculpture pulsing East River water throughout its mixed-media structure.

New art gallery opens in Kellogg

New art gallery opens in Kellogg

KELLOGG –– A recent addition to uptown Kellogg business scene has many locals excited for art.

CM Studio and Galley opened its doors in April of this year and for owner Cassie Hoialmen, it’s all about bringing art to Kellogg.

Hoialmen, 26, is a North Idaho native, spending her youth in the Kootenai County area before relocating to the Silver Valley with her husband.

An artist herself, she quickly realized that the art scene in Kellogg left quite a bit to be desired and began putting together a plan.

“I’ve always wanted to open an art gallery,” Hoialmen said. “I’ve always wanted to represent artists and in this town, there isn’t much of an art outlet.”

Her goal was to establish a place that could feature experienced artists, give newer artists a place to get their start, and cultivate a sense of community for the Silver Valley’s art lovers.

“We firmly believe in the power of art to transform lives and inspire connections within our community,” Hoialmen said.

With 14 artists currently occupying space at CM Studio and Gallery, she’s got quite the collection on display and for sale.

Hoialmen works exceptionally hard to curate art exhibitions that force people to stop really take a look rather than just a passing glance – on her website she states that one of her primary goals and who she is as a person is embracing things outside of traditional comfort zones.

“CM Studio and Gallery is not just a venue for showcasing art; it is a place where creativity flourishes, and boundaries are pushed,” Hoialmen said. “Through carefully curated exhibitions and events, we strive to foster an inclusive environment that embraces diversity and encourages collaboration among artists and art enthusiasts.”

So far, Hoialmen says that the reception from the community has been a positive one – and in a neighborhood of Kellogg that was previously known for being a hub of business that is working to return to that, she’s happy to be part of that regrowth.

A ribbon-cutting ceremony on her grand opening was hosted by the Silver Valley Chamber, and attended by many of her new neighboring businesses – all of whom are excited for there to be another reason to come to uptown Kellogg.

“I really wanted something in Kellogg, Wallace has the Eureka Sally Gallery, and I thought something like that could fit here in uptown Kellogg,” she said. “I want to be able to give a largely unrepresented group of people over here some representation.”

Hoialmen has already hosted a few workshops at the gallery, but plans to do more in the future – including coordinating with her artists to see if they would like to lead the classes.

As new works of art make their way into the galley as well as different artists, Hoialmen will be regularly hosting art walk events at the gallery as well.

Open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., CM Studio and Gallery is located at 115 McKinley Avenue in Kellogg.

You can also follow them on Facebook to see the work from many of the artists who are featured there.

Getting to Know: Mallory Maupin and Samuel Rose

Getting to Know: Mallory Maupin and Samuel Rose

In their brightly lit, smartly appointed shop in Midtown,
Topstitch owners Mallory Maupin and Samuel Rose teach workshops,
fulfill custom orders, consult on product development and work on
their own projects. If you need anything from restaurant napkins
to an athletic shoe prototype, Topstitch can make it or teach you
how to make it. 

Maupin inherited her love of wearable art from her grandma, who
was a model, and her mom, who was also enamored with clothes. She
attended the Academy of Art University in San Francisco, where
she majored in fashion merchandising and switched to fashion
marketing when she discovered she had a knack for it. In addition
to being the chief operating officer of Topstitch, she works for
a firm as an account executive.

Topstitch CEO Rose grew up in Colorado and then Sacramento. He
always paid close attention to fashion as an expression of
subculture, whether it was skating, hip-hop or punk. His senior
year in high school, he completed a screen-printing internship in
Galt with a professional printer. From that point on, he was
completely hooked. 

Rose studied fashion design after high school and took a
life-changing trip to New York City to tour the garment district.
His first job was at a military-style brand in San Francisco,
where he learned to construct out of heavy materials, how to
price, how to scale — all the logistics involved in getting a
product to market.

The couple met on the corner of Market and Montgomery in San
Francisco while Maupin was still in school and Rose was making
hunting jackets. Their mutual love of clothing, design and
culture drew them together. “It’s a form of artistic expression,
and I think it’s really powerful because it’s something you carry
with you each day. It’s the way you present yourself to the
world,” Maupin says.

Flash forward to the present, and their shared vision of starting
a fashion industry in Sacramento has become a reality with
Topstitch. It’s not enough for this team to build their own
brand: They want to activate an entire workforce of fashion
designers.

On building community through fun and education:

Maupin: We provide community-based
workshops like sip and sew; kind of entertainment-based, social
experiences where you’re learning a new skill. 

Rose: We’re working with Sol
Collective, and we put together a 10-week course for Native youth
with the basics of sewing but also photography, marketing, screen
printing — how to build and sell a brand. So we provide the
basics, and then they work with the elders who will teach them
traditional finish work. 

Maupin: So, trying to build skills and
inter-generational knowledge that they can bring back into their
communities. 

How they are incubating unique style and developing a
fashion industry in Sacramento: 

Maupin: If you look at our community
colleges and Sac State, they have really strong fashion programs,
and for those students, there’s nowhere for them to apply their
technical skills. There’s no roadmap. 

Rose: Every single one of our talented
people is told they have to go somewhere else to succeed. But if
we can give you a job when you’re coming up, you get to sharpen
your skills and collect a paycheck. You’re growing so much every
day … and when you’re ready to start your brand, we can help with
that.

It’s very important for there to be a fashion industry here.
There’s the designing and building of each piece and the
appreciation from the general public for high-quality, unique
clothing. And if we can get both of those things in Sacramento,
we can become a hub and start influencing places like Los Angeles
or New York — we can have our own ecosystem and our own style
too. 

Maupin:We do product development, so
let’s say you’re a yoga studio and you want to start an
athleisure line. You have some ideas but you don’t know how to do
it. We’ll help you figure out the technical pieces with
prototyping, testing, building product samples, and really get it
ready to go into production. And you’d have the option to produce
with us. 

We want to give local businesses the chance to manufacture close
by: high quality with ethical standards. We specialize in soft
goods, anything you can make with textiles. We’d like to work
with farm-to-fork restaurants and hospitality. We want them to
come to us because they see the value in it. 

Rose:It’s also about trying to keep the
money in Sacramento. There’s no way you can get 45 chef coats
made here. … So for example, I’d love to bring more streetwear
into the restaurants, like super-cool chef coats that really
stand out — really functional and signature Sacramento.

On fast fashion and solving the problem of
waste:

Maupin:We want to support smaller
brands and companies in a sustainable way, so we have low
minimums. When you manufacture overseas, you have really high
minimums, so it’s important to us to be able to offer emerging
brands the option of producing 50 units so you can take it to
market, test it, see if it works. 

Rose:When you spend $6 on a shirt,
you’re not going to care as much. But when you see it as a
quality piece, you’re going to hang onto it. If we can produce a
higher quality product with a better story, you’re less likely to
throw it in the landfill. We have a textile manufacturer here,
one of very few left in the states. Imagine if in five years,
Sacramento had a fashion district where there’s textiles, a
production house, a school, a whole community of designers with
their own shops … and nothing ends up in the garbage. 

Maupin: We’re trying to create a
movement and show people that there is a way to do it all here.

Edited for length and clarity. 

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A Landscape of Organized Chaos: Nigerian Photographers at MoMA

A Landscape of Organized Chaos: Nigerian Photographers at MoMA
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The museum’s celebrated series on emerging talents in photography turns to the first group show focusing on West Africa.

A boy, his face out of focus, is walking toward you. He holds a bucket, and there is a slight spring in his steps. In the foreground, clothes hang above the frame, like obstacles preventing you from looking. And this boy, where is he coming from? Where is he going to? Why does he seem happy even though he is surrounded by heaps of trash and bush? If you have ever lived in Lagos, Nigeria, then you will know that these clothes are most likely his school uniform that he had just washed and spread out to dry, and that his happy strides are from finishing the day’s laundry. Everything — the boy, the heap of trash, the bush — is out of focus, and what is truly seen are the clothes that frame his life.

Logo Oluwamuyiwa, “Coming Close,” from the series “Monochrome Lagos,” 2015. The clothes drying, perhaps a school uniform, frame his life,” our critic says.Logo Oluwamuyiwa

This scene from “Coming Close” by Logo Oluwamuyiwa, one of seven artists in the ongoing “New Photography 2023” exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, embodies the springing zigzag of Lagos presented in a delicious and nuanced manner through the show. Although “New Photography 2023” is the 28th edition in MoMA’s well-known series since its inauguration in 1985, it is the first group show in the museum’s history featuring the work of living West African photographers. This turn toward a more global outlook is already bearing interesting fruits as the museum acquires a selection of works by Kelani Abass, Abraham Oghobase and Akinbode Akinbiyi — three of the photographers in the exhibition. “It has been a true honor to bring these works into the collection,” says Oluremi C. Onabanjo, an associate curator at MoMA who organized the show, which encompasses a broad range of styles and textures, colors and gestures, working through street photography, documentary, and abstraction, landing in Yagazie Emezi’s photojournalistic images of the October 2020 #EndSARS protests in Nigeria, when young people called for ending police brutality and disbanding the unit known as the Special Anti-Robbery Squad.

Yagazie Emezi, “Untitled,” from “#EndSARS Protests,” 2020, inkjet print.Yagazie Emezi; via Richard Taittinger Gallery, New York

In 2014, one year after he began his “Monochrome Lagos” series, from which his works in the show were selected, Oluwamuyiwa, 23 at the time, began visiting the Center for Contemporary Arts Lagos — an independent nonprofit art organization founded in 2007 by the Nigerian curator Bisi Silva — where he discovered the work of the street photographers Robert Frank and Garry Winogrand.

“They helped me develop a sense of kinship,” Oluwamuyiwa said by phone, “and I became confident that photographing was a valid way to understand a city.” His interpretations of Lagos are gritty and fast paced, matching the environment in which he works, yet he manages to elucidate things that can only be apparent to someone looking closely. In such moments, as in “Boss and Assistant” where two men in a Danfo (the rundown yellow minibuses used for public transport) seem to be whispering to each other, or in “Hazy II,” where light pours from under the Third Mainland Bridge onto two figures standing in a canoe, the images transcend their sharp surfaces and acquire a misty luster; grittiness gives way to haziness, and the private anxieties of Lagos life become heightened.

A quick history of Lagos: Indigenously peopled by the Awori, it was once a military outpost for the ancient Benin Kingdom, a slave trading port for the Portuguese, who named it after their own city, and eventually an entry point for British colonialism into Nigeria.

Amanda Iheme’s “Casa de Fernandez—Death-14” from the series “The Way of Life,” 2015, shows colonial history being erased. A circa 1840s building was once home to slave traders and later housed stores and a popular bar.Amanda Iheme

The vestiges of these histories, now mostly disappeared, subsist in dilapidated British colonial buildings and houses with Cuban-Brazilian type architecture built by formerly enslaved people who returned to Nigeria in the late 19th century. As part of her series “The Way of Life,” in 2015 Amanda Iheme began photographing the Casa de Fernandez, one of the colonial-era buildings reported to have housed slaves in the 1840s. Its ownership had passed down from Afro-Brazilians to auctioneers to a Yoruba owner who turned it into a bar, and down to the colonial government, which declared it a monument and used it as a post office. Tied up amid power cables from the streets, with aged beams and railings, the building’s pink sheen — a patina of its glory days — has mostly peeled off, revealing brown bricks underneath, a long march toward an impending death.

Karl Ohiri, “Untitled” from the series “The Archive of Becoming” (2015- ongoing). The artist creates “marvelously grassy, melancholic portraits,” developing negatives discarded by photo studios.Karl Ohiri

Iheme, in contrast to Oluwamuyiwa, and perhaps due to her own training as a psychotherapist, makes pictures that are soft toned and slow, as if listening for sound, but heavy and considered, as if she were plucking each frame from the jaws of oblivion. Iheme did literally save a stone from the rubble of the Casa de Fernandez when it was demolished without explanation by the government in 2016. Items in other photos include transport tickets, “Secret” government files, and passports she salvaged from the floors of a second ruinous building that used to house the Federal Ministry of Justice.

Akinbode Akinbiyi, “Bar Beach, Victoria Island, Lagos,” from the series “The Sea Never Dry.” His warm palette turns sand and water into the same color, so that a praying woman seems to be dividing the sea with her feet.Akinbode Akinbiyi

Akinbode Akinbiyi’s photographs — although not as directly — carry on this inspection of disappeared histories that lurk around Lagos, hunted by ghosts of what were national events. When one looks at his pictures of Bar Beach, on Victoria Island and selected from a series that the 76-year-old photographer started in 1982, it is impossible to discern that public executions of coup plotters and armed robbers, witnessed by thousands of Lagosians, happened here. Instead, focusing on the bustle that came to be the tedium of life at Bar Beach after the violent ’70s, Akinbiyi devises a warm black and white palette — resisting digital cameras and sticking only with lenses ground by hand — that turns sand and water into the same color, so that a praying woman garbed in white, walking away from a set of empty chairs toward the edge of the frame, her small Bible slightly raised, seems to be dividing the sea with her feet. In the second-floor galleries, the photographs are hung with what looks like office clips — a poignant technique that suggests that they can be easily rolled off, the same way the world of Bar Beach was folded away when the government cordoned off the seashore from the public, reclaimed the land, and turned it into an expensive and garish “Atlantic City.”

Kelani Abass, “Unfolding Layers 6,” from “Casing History,” 2021. Letterpress type-case with digital prints — part family memoir, part sculpture.Kelani Abass

Although this is a photography exhibition, there are sudden, extraordinary turns, starting with Kelani Abass’s work, when the lines between photography, sculpture and painting blur. Transposing 1960s-era photographs from his family archives into wooden letterpress type-cases, from when his father ran a letterpress printing company, Abass uses the personal archive to encase history in a way that complements the marvelously grassy, melancholic portraits by Karl Ohiri, who collected and developed various discarded negatives from photo studios in Lagos that had closed or turned to digital photography. The installation of Abass’s large family journal detailing personal philosophy, customs and traditions — some in Yoruba — looks less out of place because of Abass’s non-obtrusive and aged letterpress cases. (Ohiri’s “Skate-board” doesn’t work quite as well because the item, which transports a disabled Lagosian through the crowded streets, followed by the filmmaker, is a little bit difficult to make out.)

Abraham Oghobase, “Untitled 01,” from his “Constructed Realities” installation, 2019–2022. A series of 10 collaged works featuring printed silk chiffon layered on inkjet prints.Abraham Oghobase

In the center of the gallery are Abraham Oghobase’s layered manual and digital manipulations of photography on texts (records from Nigeria’s colonial period) providing an excellent backbone for the exhibition while stretching the limits of the medium.

This impressive dance with materiality in the show probably comes to a peak in Oluwamuyiwa’s posters, meant to be taken away by visitors. The first thing tourists in Lagos might notice are the multitude of roadside stalls where traders selling similar items cluster together as if sheer repetition is enough to interest any passer-by, and where items for sale are stacked publicly for easy dispersal, in the spirit of a city where everything must move swiftly because there is not even enough “time to check time,” as they say in Lagos. The posters are an invitation into the bumbling spirit of Lagos, mirrored by Oluwamuyiwa’s photographs — of sleeping mattresses layered on each other (“Repose Assistants”) and minibuses parked together (“Danfo Roofs”).

Logo Oluwamuyiwa, “Repose Assistants” from the series “Monochrome Lagos” (2020). Traders selling similar items cluster together and items for sale are stacked publicly for easy dispersal, in the spirit of a city where everything must move swiftly.Logo Oluwamuyiwa

“New Photography 2023” makes a compelling case for the turn of the series toward a global outlook focused on a city. There is harmony in the exhibition, allowing for experimentations on what a photography show might be when nuance is embraced. With a common anchor, it demonstrates how the works of seven individuals, properly meshed, might form a wondrous introduction for a traveling audience. The choice of Lagos as a starting point is a curious but astute one. Situated in a country currently gaining cultural capital for its Afrobeats music and fast-rising art scene, Lagos with its overwhelming pace is not particularly friendly to foreigners; it is a city that requires patience, work, and grit to love, and perhaps a bit of bravery. This is the point of the show: that astounding art demands and is worth the extra effort.

New Photography 2023: Kelani Abass, Akinbode Akinbiyi, Yagazie Emezi, Amanda Iheme, Abraham Oghobase, Karl Ohiri, Logo Oluwamuyiwa

Through Sept. 16, Museum of Modern Art, 11 West 53rd Street; 212-708-9400; moma.org.

From Belfast to the Karakoram mountains: the photography of Alain Le Garsmeur

From Belfast to the Karakoram mountains: the photography of Alain Le Garsmeur
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Laughing children in Berenty school, Madagascar, 1984. Assignments took Le Garsmeur worldwide; among the countries he visited were the US, Canada, Belize, Honduras, Jamaica, Nicaragua, China, Hong Kong, both North and South Korea, Bhutan, Tibet, Ireland, Scotland, Lisbon, France, Italy, Switzerland, Sweden, Poland, the former Yugoslavia, Russia, Israel and the West Bank, the UAE and Tunisia