Lens Magazine

AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH QUIM FÀBREGAS

THE CHILDHOOD OF THE BAKA PYGMIES

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The childhood of the Baka pygmies is a photograph­ic report made in the jungle of Cameroon. This report exhibits the childhood life of the pygmies, their freedom, their way of spending hours in the middle of nature, and the toughness of living in a habitat that rains for many months of the year, and It's extremely tough to get food. You can see the faces of the happy and cheerful children, but you can also see the hardness of the mothers.

Lens Magazine: Thank you Quim, for taking the time for this interview. Could you share a bit of your background, where you grew up? Education or previous jobs? Did you come from an artistic family?

Quim Fàbregas: I grew up in a coastal town near Barcelona. Calella and I had a wonderful childhood full of life and many friends. We boys at that time lived on the streets. My parents had a restaurant, and studies were not the most important thing, but helping them work in the family business or at an early age to start working normally in hotels in the city. When I was 22 years old, I went down to a photograph­ic store in one of my jobs, and there I found a passion for photograph­y.

I come from a very hard-working family, and some direct relatives are musicians, painters, or my brother, an actor in television series and theaters in Spain.

L.M.: What led you to focus mainly on humanitari­an and cultural issues around the world?

Q. F.: At the age of 22, I got serious with photograph­y because of so much passion I had, and I studied a basic course in the photograph­ic entity of my town

Foto Film Calella. Then I started as a black and white laboratory teacher and in charge of the study. In one of the meetings, Vicente Ferrer proposed a trip to India, a Spanish missionary whose direct family was from Calella. And at the age of 24, I made my first photograph­ic trip to India in one of the country's poorest areas.

I was there for a month, and my life changed completely. It was when I decided to travel the world to photograph it and make a better world. I left everything to help thousands of people, especially in Africa, where we have carried out 12 humanitari­an projects.

L.M.: Please share some informatio­n about your intensive activism for humanitari­an issues with our readers and the main goals?

Q. F.: I traveled to the Gambia and Senegal with a humanitari­an organizati­on six months after the trip to India. I found a place with a totally different energy in Africa than the places I had been or lived before. That energy made me feel better every moment. I worked as a volunteer and as a photograph­er in an organizati­on for 7 years. We were dedicated to agricultur­e projects. When he was in Spain, he gave lectures and exhibition­s to explain the difficulti­es in rural villages.

In 2009 I started my own personal project. I began to live for 8 or 9 months a year in different areas of Africa such as Gambia, Senegal, Burkina, Benin, or Cameroon, organizing trips and photograph­ic reports. With the sale of my photograph­s, we began to carry out education, health, sports, or agricultur­e projects. Before the pandemic, I started working in Mongolia or India, and South America.

The pandemic has stopped us all.

L.M.: Many of the portraits in B&W are very intense, which we see as representi­ng the importance of photograph­y in your life. Why Black and White?

Q. F.: I started analog photograph­y, and my first steps were to develop my images in the laboratory at my own home. I studied the Anselm Adams zone system. I have been researchin­g precise black and white developmen­t for years. When we started digital photograph­y, I started to study the laboratory developmen­t process of the zone system digitally, where I got the results where I wanted to go. But it has not only been for the studies of black and white, but for my way of being. From a young age, I had a lot of anxiety that at times reached depression.

Photograph­y helped me understand my soul's problems, my being, and many answers because certain things happened to me. As I traveled through Africa, I began to heal.

Africa is light, colors, life, everything, and people believe that there is only poverty, but much of my work is in black and white for reasons that I have lived in my life. My soul has been more sad than happy, and that gives revelation to why many of my photograph­s are in black and white.

L.M.: Tell us about the intimate situation with the figure. Do you spend time before the shooting with the person to get the right atmosphere?

Q. F.: Most of my photograph­s of people are people who live with them. For more than a decade, I spent a lot of time in different parts of the world, especially in Africa. There he lived with them for seasons. That means they are part of my family. By having this direct contact, you can photograph with much more intimacy, reaching each person's soul. Taking a portrait is more than a click. It is a cluster of emotions and unique sensations and is also shared with each other.

There are portraits where the emotion has been so great that I have come to cry. And the greatest satisfacti­on is that the person I photograph feels comfortabl­e, relaxed, without posturing. Being him or herself. And that's how it is when you really reach the souls.

L. M.: With tremendous photograph­y experience, as a fine art photograph­er but also as a photojourn­alist, you've seen the industry's fluctuatio­n. What is your opinion about the current state of photograph­y and the effect social media has had on the photograph­y industry?

Q. F.: I think photograph­y is not valued for people who have been working with such passion and soul for a long time. It is not valued as a serious profession. At the time of analog photograph­y, it was a very exciting time because those people who felt them at heart and who struggled to progress in the world of photojourn­alism or art, in general, were dedicated to photograph­y. Currently, photograph­y has reached millions of people who, through social media, seem to believe that they can be photograph­ers or artists simply because they are influencer­s. Today's most important social networks are photograph­y and video, and we see millions of images a day, but without a doubt with a very low level artistical­ly.

L.M.: What was the most exciting experience you have encountere­d during your travel? And the most difficult?

Q. F.: I have had many moments of all kinds in my 20 years of photograph­ic career, more good than bad. But without a doubt, one of the most exciting stories was meeting Kadijatou in The Gambia. In 2006 I did my first social photograph­ic report in Africa, at Kadijatou's wedding, she was 15 years old, and I made the best-known photograph of my work, which I called "The bride's tear."

That image traveled the world, being exhibited in New York, Mexico, Venezuela, Argentina,

Chile, Peru, Spain, Brussels, and many newspapers or magazines. Years passed, and he always had in mind to go see her again. Until 2009, without knowing anything about her, I went to the village where she got married. And I saw her again. She remembered me a lot all her life about her. We made a campaign of that photograph to sell it, signed by her and me, and with the profits, we have built a project to give water to her village. Nowadays, when I go to the Gambia,

I live with her and her family in her house. The worst experience was when I made a trip from Barcelona to Burkina Faso by car. On the border of Mauritania, the military detained me in a forest so that the terrorists in the area would not kidnap me.

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Quim Fàbregas© All rights reserved.
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Quim Fàbregas © All rights reserved.
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Quim Fàbregas © All rights reserved.
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Quim Fàbregas © All rights reserved.
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Quim Fàbregas © All rights reserved.

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