Medicine Hat News

AP photog uses box camera for Peru festival portraits

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SINAKARA VALLEY, Peru One by one, Associated Press photograph­er Rodrigo Abd positioned the traditiona­l dancers, musicians and vendors in front of an old-fashioned box camera in Peru’s Sinakara Valley as a colorful Andean festival exploded all around them.

The men, women and children were among the tens of thousands of pilgrims representi­ng some eight nations who came to this sacred place in Quispicanc­his province in Peru’s Cuzco region for the annual Snow Star Festival, shortly before this year’s Christian feast of Corpus Christi.

After their portraits were made, the subjects spoke of the beliefs and rituals they keep alive in the 21st century.

“I’m proud to be another soldier for the Lord of Qoyllur Rit’i,” said 33-yearold Aldo Machaca Quispe, referring to the image of Jesus Christ venerated in the region. He sat for a portrait with his son Brandon, 6, and said he hoped to pass down the traditions to the boy.

Last year, Abd used digital equipment to photograph the three-day festival that also coincides with the reappearan­ce of the star cluster Pleiades in the Southern Hemisphere, signalling the abundance of the harvest season.

But this year, he chose to bring his old-fashioned box camera, a primitive device built of wood and modeled on ones he saw portrait photograph­ers using in Afghanista­n while he was on assignment there in 2006.

With a lens and space for a developing lab inside, the box camera uses 19th century technology to produce luminous, black and white images.

“The idea of making portraits with my wooden camera of the pilgrims ... was beguiling,” Abd said of the project. “But once on the ground, the project also represente­d an enormous logistical complexity.”

Abd and two assistants, Victor Zea and Ignacio Gonzalez Vigil, used three pack horses to transport the heavy camera, its tripod, black cloth to block light during developing, processing chemicals and a tent through nearfreezi­ng temperatur­es to a plain about 14,700 feet (4,500 metres) high, set amid a snow-capped mountain range adored by the Quechua people.

Inscribed on UNESCO'S Intangible Cultural Heritage list, the Peruvian festival features a pilgrimage by local people to the sanctuary where a boulder with an image of Jesus Christ known as the Lord of Qoyllur Rit’i ’(pronounced KOL-yer REE-chee), or Snow Star in the Quechua language. ___ Online: AP 360 video on festival: https://youtu.be/X4-y8B08Prw

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