News Posts (do not delete)

PODCAST: In conversation with Ian Weldon, author and host of Outerfocus 60 Podcast Newcastle, England, June 12, 2020

Outerfocus turns 60.

I hope that you are all well during what is becoming a very troubled time, on a global scale. I believe that there is a different future on the other side and this ‘down time’ can help us to focus on what that will mean.

This week I’m afforded the opportunity to talk with the very wonderful, Jane Baldwin about her long term project about women, culture, human rights and the environmental issues that threaten the communities of Ethiopia’s Omo River Valley and Kenya’s Lake Turkana watershed.

I’d rather not get into it here but this conversation has made me think. Especially about what else I could be doing moving forward. I very much hope that you enjoy this conversation and the stories and insight herein.

“They think that we’re not educated, but we know that whenever they open their mouths they say nothing but lies”

Jane Baldwin, an American artist and educator, uses black and white film and audio recordings to document her photographic work. Baldwin’s most recent project Kara Women Speak is a multi-sensory, immersive body of work about women, culture, human rights and the environmental issues that threaten the communities of Ethiopia’s Omo River Valley and Kenya’s Lake Turkana watershed. Her advocacy for the human rights and environmental concerns of the Omo River Valley and Kenya’s Lake Turkana watershed is based on her lived experiences in the field and represents over ten years of fieldwork—2005-2014. 

Initially, Baldwin traveled to Ethiopia’s Omo River Valley as a photographer. Her advocacy for the human rights and environmental concerns of Ethiopia’s Omo River Valley and Kenya’s Lake Turkana watershed developed slowly and are based on her 10 years of annual travel to the region. These experiences became an entry into the issues and fate of the communities of the Omo River Valley and Lake Turkana watershed. The project has become an overlay of women’s stories told through photography, video, ambient sounds, and recorded interviews. Her goal has been to give voice to the vulnerable and reveal the humanity of the women and their communities whose stories might otherwise disappear.

Baldwin has been able to provide additional opportunities for the women’s stories to be heard—stories of fear and concern about their future. Since 2014, she had continued to work on behalf of the indigenous people of the Omo River through museum exhibitions and collaborations with international NGOs.

Baldwin is a founding board member of PhotoAlliance San Francisco, California; 

2012 - 2018, a member of the board of directors of International Rivers, Oakland, California; BA English Literature, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; photography, UC Berkeley, San Francisco campus. Baldwin resides in Sonoma, California.

© Jane Baldwin. Young Kwegu mother, Omo River, Ethiopia, 2005

© Jane Baldwin. Young Kwegu mother, Omo River, Ethiopia, 2005

 
Omo River, Southwestern Ethiopia, 2010

Omo River, Southwestern Ethiopia, 2010

 
Aerial of the Omo River, Ethiopia, 2009

Aerial of the Omo River, Ethiopia, 2009

WEBINAR: In conversation with Cleary Vaughan-Lee, ED, Global Oneness Project, Inverness, CA, May 21, 2020

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Webinar Interview with Photographer Jane Baldwin


I've always been intrigued by the way places change over time. This is one component that we are including in our new lesson plans. We will be releasing the first batch in the coming weeks. How are the people and places featured in our short documentary films and photo essays experiencing change and what are the factors that precipitate that change?   

We will be exploring this topic with photographer Jane Baldwin in our next community storyteller conversation event this Thursday, May 21th at 11am/PST. Her photo essay "Kara Women Speak" documents the lives of the Kara tribe living in the Omo River Valley, located in southwestern Ethiopia. The Omo River is the main vein of the Omo River watershed and extends more than 400 miles to feed 90 percent of Lake Turkana's water, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Kenya. Over the past decade, Jane traveled to this region photographing and recording stories from the women of Indigenous communities. 

Her work is an intimate portrayal of the women who have lived for centuries unaffected by colonialism or modernity. She writes, “It’s my hope this photo essay will encourage interest in the issues facing the people of Lake Turkana and Ethiopia’s Omo River Valley. The global drive for dwindling natural resources, and destruction of healthy ecosystems, of water, soil, and air will potentially affect us all.” 

A former member of the board of directors of the non-profit International Rivers, Jane will share stories and photographs from her recent trips to the Omo River Valley, a place that has experienced drastic changes due to a massive hydroelectric dam and land grabs. 

Jane will also share some photography tips for those students who are entering our student photography contest. Please do bring your questions to the conversation or send them to us in advance. If you can't join us, register and we'll send you the recording. Sign language interpreters will be available during the live event. 


I hope you can join us!


All the best,
Cleary Vaughan-Lee
Executive Director 
Global Oneness Project 


Photo by Jane Baldwin

Discussion with photographer Jane Baldwin



VIDEO: Sonoma Valley Museum of Art, Sonoma, CA

Sonoma Valley Museum of Art. A forum on women, water, land, and human rights. 

Jane Baldwin in conversation with Anuradha Mittal of the Oakland Institute; Muadi Mukenge of the Global Fund for Women; Lori Pottinger for International Rivers; and Stephen Corry of Survival International. Moderated by David Bolling, Sonoma journalist and environmental activist. Pinching the Lifeline: The Human Impact of the Global Rush for Dwindling Natural Resources.  November 16, 2015