Edward Morgan
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Azulejo Art
  • NGO Work
  • Blog

Lost in Music

25/11/2015

Comments

 
Gorkha, Nepal
November 2015
Comments

The Invisible Enemy

19/11/2015

Comments

 
Kathmandu, Nepal

There was an earthquake this morning. It measured five point something on the Richter scale. It doesn't matter because I didn't even feel it.

I had my earthquake drill ready as well. I'd made a mental note to check it out a few hours before stepping on the plane for Nepal. The conversation in the taxi had taken a slightly awkward turn as someone mentioned that it had been almost universally accepted amongst international seismologists that the April/May earthquakes in Nepal were simply small warm ups to an enormous and very imminent panhimalayan quake that, by the sounds of it, would flatten the Earth.

In fairness to him, he did me a favour. I hadn't even considered the possibility of another earthquake while I was actually IN Nepal. That just wasn't on the cards. I was there to look at the effects of the last earthquake, not experience a new one.

So, having used up 44 of my 45 free minutes of airport wifi on absolutely nothing (really, nothing), I managed to squeeze out a webpage on earthquake drill. What did I learn? That everything I thought I knew, namely stand in a doorway, get outside, was wrong. Like, fifty years out of date wrong. As with so much in life, you're left wondering why you ever bother paying attention to pretty much anything at all. Everything we're told ends up being either wrong or exactly the opposite, then eventually wrong - red meat is now definitely (definitely) as carcinogenic as smoking, fat is actually good for you, and the new silent killer is inactivity.

Well, a week on the sofa sounds like a pretty reasonable way to go compared to being crushed by three floors of concrete. They're certainly nothing silent about them. (Earthquake Advice #1: If you're in bed, stay in bed).

As I walk through the tight little rumble-jumble alleys of central Kathmandu, the lights are out and the prospect of an earthquake now is a little unnerving. Large beams crisscross the streets, supporting the semi-collapsed buildings on either side. I can touch both sides of some of these streets with my the tips of my outstretched hands so there's very little room to avoid falling debris should the hosues start shaking it down on me. (Earthquake Advice #2: Most of the injuries suffered in an earthquake are from falling items and smashed glass). The juvenile game of "What if?" leaps back into my consciousness as I try to consider every eventuality. I walk past a sketchy two-metre-high wall. It's bulging in the middle. Two metres to my right is a chaotic moving mass of traffic that would most likely veer catastrophically out of control as the road crumbled beneath. There is literally nowhere to go should the wall come a-tumbling down. (Earthquake Advice #3: Don't bother running. It's likely you won't be able to).

I think back to an earlier conversation with two young Kathmandu residents. The earthquake that killed over 9,000 people and reduced almost entire towns to rubble lasted a full minute. What? It takes me longer to work out which way round my shoes are in the morning.

I walk on.

And in fact, that is what I see most people doing - simply getting on with life. Yes, they spent two months sleeping in the streets for fear of more aftershocks. Yes, they know another quake is likely. But they're really more concerned about the current fuel crisis, a result of dodgy politics, and where they will find enough fuel to heat their homes and cook their food as winter creeps in.
Comments

Street Photographer wanted in Paris

18/11/2015

Comments

 
I'm looking for a photographer in Paris who would be interested in a collaborative photographic project between Kathmandu and Paris asap. Please share, or even better, be that photographer!

INFORMATION
I am currently in Kathmandu, Nepal and over the next two weeks I will be exploring various social and development projects concerned with post-earthquake rebuilding. In addition, as a follow-up to the successful 2Photographers project in July between Athens and Berlin, I am looking to develop a similar collaborative project looking at the two cities, Kathmandu and Paris, in the aftermath of disaster, the earthquake six months ago in Nepal and the recent terrorist attacks in Paris.

The idea of 2Photogaphers is to create a visual "conversation" between two photographers in two different locations around the world within the same time period. For a look at the first 2Photographers project, A Tale of Two Cities: Athens & Berlin, please follow this link.

My stay in Nepal is relatively short so time is of the essence.

You can contact me via Facebook ( https://facebook.com/EdwardMorganPhotographer ), ecmorgan [at] ymail.com or here on my website.
Comments
    You can also find me here:

    All tags

    All
    2 Photographers
    Africa
    Architecture
    Asia
    Azulejo Art
    Beach
    B&W
    Cape Verde
    Children
    Clowns Without Borders
    Collaborations
    Commercial
    Crisis Personal
    Dance
    Denmark
    Disability
    Elderly
    Europe
    Exhibitions
    Experimental
    Fashion
    Food
    Greece
    Greek Crisis
    India
    Inspiration
    Instagram
    Iraq
    Jordan
    Landscape
    Lesotho
    Literacy
    Mobile Phone Photography
    Mobile Postcards
    Music
    Nepal
    Ngo Work
    Niger
    Norway
    Ollos Que Non Ven
    Painting
    People
    Philosophy Of Photography
    Photography
    Photography Tips
    Photos
    Politics
    Portrait Photography
    Portraits
    Portugal
    Quazi Design
    Rehabilitation
    Save The Children
    Society
    Sotho Sounds
    South Africa
    Spain
    Spinal Injury
    Sport
    Still Life
    Storytelling
    Street Art
    Street Photography
    Street Soundtracks
    Swaziland
    Theatre
    The Four Elements
    Travel Writing
    United Kingdom
    Video
    Vigo
    Wales
    Wildlife Photography
    Writing

    RSS Feed

About

Edward (Edi) Morgan is a photographer, artist, storyteller and creative cowboy based in Vigo, Spain, working both nationally and internationally.

(+34) 649 349 763
edward [at] edwardmorgan.net
Unless otherwise stated, all content © Edward Morgan 2016

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Azulejo Art
  • NGO Work
  • Blog