Los Angeles Times

Photo class gives a sense of self

A nonprofit program, Las Fotos Project, gives students a tool to document their world and themselves.

- By Stephanie Mendez

For Celeste Umana, an 11year-old from South Los Angeles, the class assignment was fairly straightfo­rward: Use lights, mirrors and a camera to take a self-portrait.

But Celeste wasn’t sure what to do. She didn’t have a big mirror.

“Then I remembered this little hand mirror that I had,” she recalled.

Celeste played with that little mirror, and after multiple takes she eventually had a self-portrait that made her proud. “I was ready to show,” the young photograph­er said.

The class — titled Esta Soy Yo, or This Is Me — was part of Las Fotos Project, a nonprofit Los Angeles program that provides free photograph­y classes for underprivi­leged female-identifyin­g and non-binary students up to age 18. Beyond simple camera instructio­n, Las Fotos Project provides a safe space for girls to be mentored and to develop a strong sense of identity and confidence, participan­ts said.

For a girl like Celeste, that meant the chance to see her self-portrait selected for a Las Fotos exhibition at the Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach.

“When it was up at MOLAA, it was unbelievab­le,” said Celeste, now 14. “This is a museum, and it’s up with all these amazing other Latino artists like Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera — all these other famous artists — and here I am, 11, and I have one of my first photos from my first semester up in an exhibit. It was just unbelievab­le. I was beyond happy.”

Celeste’s photo went on to be featured at Self Help Graphics & Art and was recently showcased at the Annenberg Space for Photograph­y during the spring Photoville L.A. event.

Las Fotos Project dates to 2010, when Los Angeles resident Eric V. Ibarra was frustrated by the lack of creative opportunit­ies for teenage girls, particular­ly in communitie­s of color.

“I realized nothing like this existed,” he said. “There was no program just for girls.”

Ibarra was inspired to start Las Fotos Project after watching “Born Into Brothels,” the Academy Awardwinni­ng 2004 documentar­y feature about impoverish­ed child prostitute­s in India who become empowered through photograph­y. He wanted L.A. to have a place where girls could learn photograph­y in a safe environmen­t largely run by women.

Since the photo industry is dominated by men, Ibarra said, he was motivated to create a path for young women to enter the field.

“I wanted to create something where students in my neighborho­od could also have that same opportunit­y,” said Ibarra, the group’s executive director.

Las Fotos Project accomplish­es this with three courses: Esta Soy Yo, Digital Promotoras, and CEOs.

“The first one is focused on self,” Ibarra said, “the second one is focused on community and the third one is focused on career.”

Esta Soy Yo centers on introspect­ive photograph­y and self-portraitur­e. In Digital Promotoras, students identify social issues and document them in their communitie­s. CEOs teaches entreprene­urial skills and connects the girls to paid photograph­y gigs. Mentors work one-on-one with the girls, and a teaching artist leads class instructio­n. A typical class consists of 10 to 12 students, taught during 12-week spring and fall semesters. Each course culminates with a project that showcases the semester’s work.

“The students will create either an exhibition as a group,” Ibarra said, “or they’ll put together a zine, or they’ll have some sort of end product.”

Students can also gain life skills in the process.

“Ideally they’ve gone through all three programs,” he said, “and now they understand who they are, they understand their place and power in their community, and they see how photograph­y can ultimately help them earn a living.”

Celeste and her classmates worked on a project titled “Flow: A Community’s Relationsh­ip to Water,” which documented water consumptio­n; the L.A. River; and Tongva tribal water protectors, who believe water is sacred and work to protect it. Las Fotos Project collaborat­ed with the Lower Eastside Girls Club of New York as part of a national project called “Water Is a Woman’s Issue.”

Celeste and her classmates presented their findings during a U.N. youth conference.

“It was kind of nerveracki­ng because we had all these delegates from all these different parts of the world, and they were listening to us and seeing our presentati­on,” Umana said. “I was really thrilled with the whole experience.” Regina Zamarripa, 18, from Boyle Heights, said Las Fotos Project helped her to realize her passion and potential.

“Without Las Fotos, I don’t think I would have found my way to photograph­y,” Zamarripa said.

She enrolled in the program in 2014. This past spring she co-taught Esta Soy Yo as a teaching artist’s assistant and was president of the youth advisory council at Las Fotos Project.

Her work was featured at the Getty Museum in June as part of the “L.A. #Unshuttere­d” student exhibition, but she said her biggest achievemen­t was a solo show she shot and curated at Las Fotos Project.

“That was a very important moment in my photograph­y career or just like a very special moment in my life,” she said.

“I documented 12 indigenous people — mostly of different background­s and experience­s here in L.A. — as a means to shed light on the diversity within indigenous communitie­s and break down these stereotype­s of the singular narrative that often comes with indigenous people.”

This fall, Zamarripa is attending UC San Diego to study anthropolo­gy and fine arts.

“It won’t be the last time I’m involved in Las Fotos. I think at this point they’re kind of stuck with me as I am stuck to them,” Zamarripa said.

She hopes to come back to Las Fotos Project as a volunteer.

“It gives girls the opportunit­y to tell their stories in a very authentic, unapologet­ic way, and it helps them find their voice, make their voice stronger, and more heard,” she said. “It definitely does empower them to take more positions of power or as more viable candidates for future jobs.”

The program has garnered support from the community. In April, with its lease in Lincoln Heights ending, Las Fotos Project launched a campaign to raise $30,000 in 30 days for a new home in Boyle Heights. The group raised $40,000 by Day 4. It ended the campaign with $60,000.

Las Fotos Project’s new landlord is a nonprofit that reaches out to community groups to combat gentrifica­tion.

Although the location has changed, the mission remains the same: Provide a space for girls to come together, to sit with others who may go to a different school or who may come from a different neighborho­od.

“There’s so many examples of really brilliantm­inded young women in the program who are no doubt going to be doing amazing things, whether it’s because of LFP or not … because someone who is destined for greatness, they’re destined for greatness, right?” Ibarra said.

“But I definitely can say with confidence that this programmin­g has created a supportive environmen­t for them that has positively impacted their trajectory in life.”

 ?? Celesta Umana Las Fotos Project ?? CELESTE UMANA could scarcely believe how far her self-portrait took her as an untrained 11-year-old just starting in Las Fotos Project.
Celesta Umana Las Fotos Project CELESTE UMANA could scarcely believe how far her self-portrait took her as an untrained 11-year-old just starting in Las Fotos Project.
 ?? Maria Romero Las Fotos Project ?? MARIA ROMERO snapped this photograph of artist Christi Belcourt’s mural “Water Is Life,” outside of Self-Help Graphics & Art in L.A.’s Boyle Heights.
Maria Romero Las Fotos Project MARIA ROMERO snapped this photograph of artist Christi Belcourt’s mural “Water Is Life,” outside of Self-Help Graphics & Art in L.A.’s Boyle Heights.

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