Giant Robot Store and GR2 News

This is a fun photo set by a person named Adrian Fisk, who with the support of the United Nations is doing a photo project that puts a single message on a board to the youths of China and now India. He’s been working on the project for a few years and it’s growing steadily. Adrian Fisk’s site is filled with great work. He’s a National Geographic photographer as well. The image below used at (BusinessInsider – Adrian Fisk) who reports on his is stunning. The dude below reveals one universal situation.
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Although I never got to see Black Flag during its glory days, I did catch several of singer Henry Rollins’ early spoken-word shows around L.A. as well as many of the Rollins Band’s first gigs. Sweaty, smart, and life affirming. Many punks griped when he signed to Interscope and started showing up on Gap billboards, but I thought it was rad of him to take such deals and start a book publishing company with the dough. Cole, Cave, Selby–what could be cooler than publishing your friends and heroes, not to mention your own words? That seemed like a stretch for the the buff, tattooed, long-haired/shaved-head frontman but he’s gone even further since then. Acting in movies. Raising funds and attention for the West Memphis 3 (I finally did see him sing Black Flag songs at Amoeba promoting that particular record). Hosting a cool talk show. Starting a must-hear radio show. Writing a compelling column for the LA Weekly. And now publishing a coffee-table book of photography.

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Andy Frazer is normally an unassuming software professional down in California’s Silicon Valley. But due to a passion for photography and a series of interconnected events, he has taken up a very special cause and turned it into a project centering on Japanese-American World War II internees. Frazer, a Caucasian man, became interested in internees in 2006 after photographing San Jose’s annual Day of Remembrance event, which commemorates Roosevelt’s 1942 executive internment Order 9066. After meeting numerous internees at the Day of Remembrance, Frazer began to learn more about the wartime internment, and developed a strong interest in internees’ lives and stories both during and after the war. The result is his web-based story archive and image gallery called Kioku: Portraits of Japanese-American Internment. Employing visual style similar to that of Richard Avedon’s “In the American West”, Frazer has compiled a striking set of portraits of Japanese-American internees as they are today. But some of their faces seem to reflect how they felt as younger men and women unjustly imprisoned by their own government. At the link, you’ll be able to learn more about the project, and read in interview with Frazer. (Nichi Bei Weekly – Wartime Internee Portrait Project) And the pictures and stories in Kioku: Portraits of Japanese-American Internment can be seen and read here.
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The book is rescued, here’s a link where you can see it’s pages for free via the Library of Congress. It’s a recently back in print book, but makes an effort to show the injustice of the incarceration. Ansel Adams has been criticized because his photographs which were released were thought to be associated with propaganda. Life was fine, people were happy, and the treatment was fair. Images containing barbed wire wasn’t allowed. But take a look for yourself. It’s a free page by page reproduction that’s online. (Library of Congress – Born Free and Equal)    
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