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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Twenty: Controlling perspective with the wideangle lens > Rice Farmers, Salavan Province, Laos, 2005
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Rice Farmers, Salavan Province, Laos, 2005

The rice farmers we saw in Southern Laos were all women. They worked long hours under a blazing sun, hacking and cutting -- backbreaking labor, work essential for survival. This group stopped working for a few moments to talk to us about their lives and problems. All were married with numerous children. Medical care and education were minimal. Their prospects for a better life are grim. To best tell their story, I chose to use my very small Canon G6 with its 24mm wideangle conversion lens, and placed it on the ground amidst the rice within a few feet of the woman at right. Because it has a flip up viewfinder, I did not have to lie face down in the dirt to frame my picture. I simply looked down into the viewfinder. The woman in the foreground, who is listening to the tales told by the woman in the middle ground, is my anchor layer. Her face is abstracted in silhouette. Her rusty rice cutting machete in hand, she could be all of us. The focal point of this image is the woman in the middle ground. Her face is turned to eloquently catch the light, a study in vulnerability. The third woman becomes the background layer. Notice how the heads diminish in size from layer to layer. All of these women are within six feet of my lens, yet each becomes a separate figure, receding in scale and lending the illusion of depth to the image. All of this is the result of my very low and very close vantage point using the 24mm wideangle lens.


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Phil Douglis01-Oct-2005 04:15
Thank you for this comment. I just as well could have used this image in my human values gallery. It speaks of the very inequities and cultural differences you noticed in West Africa. But I choose to use it here to underscore the value of the wideangle lens as a tool of expression.
Guest 30-Sep-2005 22:07
Phil, I like this picture for its human qualities - I did not see the surroundings, just these women under the blazing sun. A few years ago, I went to a village in West Africa where women worked in the fields under the very strong sun with young babies on their backs while men stayed in the village sitting and talking, chewing cacao or coffee beans, while watching for the other children not old enough to go to school. Ah, these cultural differences... Anyway, I love this picture for what it represents.
Phil Douglis04-Mar-2005 21:50
I never made the connection between the rice straw on the ground, and the straw hats on their heads. But it's there, and it certainly pulls the image together.
Guest 04-Mar-2005 17:33
I like the composition, colour and texture here, but most of all the contrast between the naturally-growing rice straw, and the (wo)man-organised version on the women's heads ;-)
Phil Douglis01-Mar-2005 03:23
Thank you, Dandan, for adding additional interpretation to this photograph. I agree with you that color here is critical to meaning. At one point I was considering using this picture in my black and white gallery, since it is as much a photojournalistic image as a travel photo. But when I converted it, the earth itself, and all that it represents, vanished, as did its meaning. I also was struck by your comment regarding the "3D" effect of this picture. The wideangle lens, depending upon where you stand (or in this case, sit) with it, can rearrange space to intensify the illusion of depth. That's what I've been able to do here with lens choice (24mm) and camera placement (in the rice itself). The brown leaves at bottom left and bottom right were actually almost touching the lens itself. The result is an intensification of the layering and a great sense of depth. I also was moved by your comments on the most distant of the three women. She seems much younger, wears a more colorful sarong, and separates herself from her partners, who seem more rooted to this ground. Perhaps she will be the most likely of this group to find a different path in life.
Guest 28-Feb-2005 14:38
More I look at this one, more I like it. The wide-angle makes this image like 3D. The foreground and middle ground women are dressed in this earth tone, so much like the land they live on. That signifies their well adapted life; they were born, grown and probably will die on this land. The third one, however, symbolizes the younger generation. She accepted her environment, but she is searching with hope, her posture and the colorful cloth also help to express this idea. It’s all about the stories of rural women’s life.
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