Photojournalism

HIP Incorporated got its start as photojournalists. We have over three decades of experience in the field of visual story telling and added value to our clients’ brand. Photojournalism is distinguished from other close branches of photography by complying with a rigid ethical framework which demands that the work is both honest and impartial while telling the story in strictly journalistic terms. Photojournalists create pictures that contribute to the news media. These images are timely, objective and narrative.

Songs Of My People
'Songs of My People,' A Black Self-Portrait Songs of My People was a book, exhibition and multimedia project created and edited by organizers Eric Easter, Dudley M. Brooks and D. Michael Cheers.[1] The book was published in February 1992 by Little, Brown, with an introduction by famed African American photographer Gordon Parks.[2] The project was named after an essay by Paul Robeson.[3] It was launched in January 1990 as an attempt to record African American life through the eyes of 50 prominent African American photographers. It was defined as an effort to deliver balanced images of African Americans in response to what the organizers perceived as frequently negative portrayals of the community. During the first week of June 1990, project photographers were flown across the United States to capture various aspects of African American life. From 190,000 photographs taken for the project, 200 were selected for the book. Of the project's photographs, 150 formed the basis of a highly attended international photo exhibition that opened in February 1992 at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.[4] The exhibition traveled to the Afro-American Historical and Cultural Museum in Philadelphia between April and May 1992.[5] For a show at the California Afro-American Museum beginning in May 1992, eight photographs by D Stevens and others related to the Los Angeles riots of 1992 were added.[6] The major tour and a second, smaller "paper" tour of 60 selected photographs was sponsored by Time Warner and shown at major museums and galleries including the Museum of the City of New York,[1] the DuSable Museum in Chicago, and the Uffizi in Italy, among others. The Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES) oversaw the international tour. Notable contributing photographers included Pulitzer Prize winners Michel duCille, Mathew Lewis, Ozier Muhammad, John H. White, and Keith Williams.[3][7] Among the other photographers involved in the project were Howard Bingham, New York Times photographer Chester Higgins, Jr., Magnum member Eli Reed, Bob Black, Jeffrey Salter, and Jeanne Moutoussamy-Ashe. The African-American people who appeared in the project's photographs included Zina Garrison, Quincy Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Thurgood Marshall, Gordon Parks, Colin L. Powell, Willy T. Ribbs, and Louis Wade Sullivan.[1][6] Film rights to a documentary based on the project were optioned by producer Quincy Jones, but the film was never produced. After the 1992-1994 tour, D. Michael Cheers donated the photographs to the Museum of Art and Archaeology at the University of Missouri.[7] The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Archives houses the Songs of My People exhibition archive, 1990-1994. The archive includes approximately one-thousand working photoprints, including all images from the publication and the exhibitions. There are also extensive photographs and contact sheets created in the course of the project. Photographic subjects include Colin Powell, Nelson Mandela, Winnie Mandela, Roy DeCarava, Muhammad Ali, Jessie Jackson, Jacob Lawerence, John Lee Hooker, Bo Diddley, Quincy Jones, Cleo Fields, Thurgood Marshall, Atallah Shabazz, David Dinkins, Marion Barry, George Clinton and Willie T. Ribbs. Many other photographs capture life as lived by ordinary African Americans.[8] (Photos by HIP Incorporated)
Robben Island Prison Museum
From the 17th to the 20th centuries, Robben Island served as a place of banishment, isolation and imprisonment. Today it is a World Heritage Site and museum, a poignant reminder to the newly democratic South Africa of the price paid for freedom. In 1846 a General Infirmary was established on Robben Island to cater for three specific categories of the sick in the colony who were poor – the insane, the chronically ill, and those with leprosy. Vision Robben Island Museum operates as a site and living museum. It aims to develop the Island as a national and international heritage and conservation institution. In managing its resources and activities, RIM will strive to maintain the unique and universal symbolism of the Island, nurture creativity and innovation as well as to contribute to the socio-economic development and transformation of the South African society and enrich humanity. Mission In implementing its vision, RIM focuses on the following core purposes: Maintaining the unique political and universal symbolism and value of RIM. Conserving and managing the natural and cultural resources and heritage of RIM. Promoting RIM as a platform for critical debate and life-long learning. Managing RIM in a manner that promotes economic sustainability and development. People lived on Robben Island many thousands of years ago, when the sea channel between the Island and the Cape mainland was not covered with water. Since the Dutch settled at the Cape in the mid-1600s, Robben Island has been used primarily as a prison. Indigenous African leaders, Muslim leaders from the East Indies, Dutch and British soldiers and civilians, women, and anti-apartheid activists, including South Africa's first democratic President, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela and the founding leader of the Pan Africanist Congress, Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe, were all imprisoned on the Island. Robben Island has not only been used as a prison. It was a training and defence station in World War II (1939-1945) and a hospital for people with leprosy, and the mentally and chronically ill (1846-1931). In the 1840s, Robben Island was chosen for a hospital because it was regarded as both secure (isolating dangerous cases) and healthy (providing a good environment for cure). During this time, political and common-law prisoners were still kept on the Island. As there was no cure and little effective treatment available for leprosy, mental illness and other chronic illnesses in the 1800s, Robben Island was a kind of prison for the hospital patients too. Since 1997 it has been a museum and a heritage site. The museum is a dynamic institution, which acts as a focal point of South African heritage. It runs educational programmes for schools, youths and adults, facilitates tourism development, conducts ongoing research related to the Island and fulfils an archiving function. Ferries depart at 9am, 11am, 1pm and 3pm, weather permitting, from Nelson Mandela Gateway, at the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town. The standard tour to Robben Island is 3.5 hours long, including the two half-hour ferry rides.
Tanzanian harvest antiMalarial plants
The National Association of Black Journalist (NABJ), in conjunction with the United Nations and the Kaiser Family Foundation, sent a delegation of journalists to the Republic of Tanzania May 5th thru 15th 2006 to focus on African health, malaria prevention and other issues. Prior to their departure to the eastern African republic, the NABJ delegation, led by NABJ President Bryan Monroe, was scheduled to meet with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and discuss his efforts in the region at the United Nations headquarters in New York City. While in Tanzania, the journalists traveled to villages around the region and planned to meet with newly-inaugurated Tanzanian president Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete, as well as several groups of African journalists from the Pan African News Agency and the Tanzanian News Agency. The group also visited local hospitals and communities in the region, and also stopped on the island of Zanzibar. The trip will honor and reflect on the memory of NABJ member Akilah Amapindi, a recent graduate who had been working on the Student Radio project at the 2005 NABJ Convention in Atlanta. Amapindi died on the last day of the convention after contracting malaria during an earlier visit to Africa. The fellowship is supported by grants from the Kaiser Family Foundation as well as the United Nations Foundation and other organizations. Up to four NABJ members will be selected for an opportunity to attend and report from Tanzania. Qualified applicants for the NABJ/UN Africa/Health Fellowship had to meet certain criteria. Participating are: Bryan Monroe, NABJ president and assistant vice president/news for Knight Ridder ; John Yearwood, NABJ treasurer and world editor of the Miami Herald; Bob Butler, director of diversity, CBS Human Resources; Damaso Reyes, reporter/photographer, New York Amsterdam News; Ervin Dyer, reporter, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; Deborah Douglas, deputy features editor, Chicago Sun-Times; Keith Hadley, photographer, Atlanta Journal-Constitution; Syandene Rhodes-Pitts, reporter/anchor, WMC-TV in Memphis; Cherie Berkley, assistant managing editor, WebMD Health; and Stephanie Arnold, writer, Philadelphia Inquirer. PHOTO BY HIP Incorporated © 2006
Zanzibar
The National Association of Black Journalist (NABJ), in conjunction with the United Nations and the Kaiser Family Foundation, sent a delegation of journalists to the Republic of Tanzania May 5th thru 15th 2006 to focus on African health, malaria prevention and other issues. Prior to their departure to the eastern African republic, the NABJ delegation, led by NABJ President Bryan Monroe, was scheduled to meet with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and discuss his efforts in the region at the United Nations headquarters in New York City. While in Tanzania, the journalists traveled to villages around the region and planned to meet with newly-inaugurated Tanzanian president Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete, as well as several groups of African journalists from the Pan African News Agency and the Tanzanian News Agency. The group also visited local hospitals and communities in the region, and also stopped on the island of Zanzibar. The trip will honor and reflect on the memory of NABJ member Akilah Amapindi, a recent graduate who had been working on the Student Radio project at the 2005 NABJ Convention in Atlanta. Amapindi died on the last day of the convention after contracting malaria during an earlier visit to Africa. The fellowship is supported by grants from the Kaiser Family Foundation as well as the United Nations Foundation and other organizations. Up to four NABJ members will be selected for an opportunity to attend and report from Tanzania. Qualified applicants for the NABJ/UN Africa/Health Fellowship had to meet certain criteria. Participating are: Bryan Monroe, NABJ president and assistant vice president/news for Knight Ridder ; John Yearwood, NABJ treasurer and world editor of the Miami Herald; Bob Butler, director of diversity, CBS Human Resources; Damaso Reyes, reporter/photographer, New York Amsterdam News; Ervin Dyer, reporter, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; Deborah Douglas, deputy features editor, Chicago Sun-Times; Keith Hadley, photographer, Atlanta Journal-Constitution; Syandene Rhodes-Pitts, reporter/anchor, WMC-TV in Memphis; Cherie Berkley, assistant managing editor, WebMD Health; and Stephanie Arnold, writer, Philadelphia Inquirer. PHOTO BY HIP Incorporated © 2006
Tanzanian harvest antimalarial plants
The National Association of Black Journalist (NABJ), in conjunction with the United Nations and the Kaiser Family Foundation, sent a delegation of journalists to the Republic of Tanzania May 5th thru 15th 2006 to focus on African health, malaria prevention and other issues. Prior to their departure to the eastern African republic, the NABJ delegation, led by NABJ President Bryan Monroe, was scheduled to meet with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and discuss his efforts in the region at the United Nations headquarters in New York City. While in Tanzania, the journalists traveled to villages around the region and planned to meet with newly-inaugurated Tanzanian president Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete, as well as several groups of African journalists from the Pan African News Agency and the Tanzanian News Agency. The group also visited local hospitals and communities in the region, and also stopped on the island of Zanzibar. The trip will honor and reflect on the memory of NABJ member Akilah Amapindi, a recent graduate who had been working on the Student Radio project at the 2005 NABJ Convention in Atlanta. Amapindi died on the last day of the convention after contracting malaria during an earlier visit to Africa. The fellowship is supported by grants from the Kaiser Family Foundation as well as the United Nations Foundation and other organizations. Up to four NABJ members will be selected for an opportunity to attend and report from Tanzania. Qualified applicants for the NABJ/UN Africa/Health Fellowship had to meet certain criteria. Participating are: Bryan Monroe, NABJ president and assistant vice president/news for Knight Ridder ; John Yearwood, NABJ treasurer and world editor of the Miami Herald; Bob Butler, director of diversity, CBS Human Resources; Damaso Reyes, reporter/photographer, New York Amsterdam News; Ervin Dyer, reporter, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; Deborah Douglas, deputy features editor, Chicago Sun-Times; Keith Hadley, photographer, Atlanta Journal-Constitution; Syandene Rhodes-Pitts, reporter/anchor, WMC-TV in Memphis; Cherie Berkley, assistant managing editor, WebMD Health; and Stephanie Arnold, writer, Philadelphia Inquirer. PHOTO BY HIP Incorporated © 2006
Tanzanian Village
The National Association of Black Journalist (NABJ), in conjunction with the United Nations and the Kaiser Family Foundation, sent a delegation of journalists to the Republic of Tanzania May 5th thru 15th 2006 to focus on African health, malaria prevention and other issues. Prior to their departure to the eastern African republic, the NABJ delegation, led by NABJ President Bryan Monroe, was scheduled to meet with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and discuss his efforts in the region at the United Nations headquarters in New York City. While in Tanzania, the journalists traveled to villages around the region and planned to meet with newly-inaugurated Tanzanian president Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete, as well as several groups of African journalists from the Pan African News Agency and the Tanzanian News Agency. The group also visited local hospitals and communities in the region, and also stopped on the island of Zanzibar. The trip will honor and reflect on the memory of NABJ member Akilah Amapindi, a recent graduate who had been working on the Student Radio project at the 2005 NABJ Convention in Atlanta. Amapindi died on the last day of the convention after contracting malaria during an earlier visit to Africa. The fellowship is supported by grants from the Kaiser Family Foundation as well as the United Nations Foundation and other organizations. Up to four NABJ members will be selected for an opportunity to attend and report from Tanzania. Qualified applicants for the NABJ/UN Africa/Health Fellowship had to meet certain criteria. Participating are: Bryan Monroe, NABJ president and assistant vice president/news for Knight Ridder ; John Yearwood, NABJ treasurer and world editor of the Miami Herald; Bob Butler, director of diversity, CBS Human Resources; Damaso Reyes, reporter/photographer, New York Amsterdam News; Ervin Dyer, reporter, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; Deborah Douglas, deputy features editor, Chicago Sun-Times; Keith Hadley, photographer, Atlanta Journal-Constitution; Syandene Rhodes-Pitts, reporter/anchor, WMC-TV in Memphis; Cherie Berkley, assistant managing editor, WebMD Health; and Stephanie Arnold, writer, Philadelphia Inquirer. PHOTO BY HIP Incorporated © 2006
Voortrekker Monument
The majestic Voortrekker Monument is situated in the northern part of South Africa in the Pretoria (Tshwane) region in a nature reserve. It is a unique Monument which commemorates the Pioneer history of Southern Africa and the history of the Afrikaner and is situated in a beautiful setting. Today it is the most visited heritage site of its kind in Gauteng and one of the top ten cultural historical visitor attractions in the country. The Monument also manages the Blood River Heritage Site. The Battle of Blood River (Afrikaans: Slag van Bloedrivier; Zulu: iMpi yaseNcome) is the name given for the battle fought between 470 Voortrekkers led by Andries Pretorius, and an estimated 10,000–15,000 Zulu attackers on the bank of the Ncome River on 16 December 1838, in what is today KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Casualties amounted to three thousand of king Dingane's soldiers dead, including two Zulu princes competing with prince Mpande for the Zulu throne. Three Trekker commando members were lightly wounded, including Pretorius himself. In the sequel to the Battle of Blood River in January 1840, prince Mpande finally defeated Dingane in the Battle of Maqongqe, and was subsequently crowned as new king of the Zulus by his alliance partner Andries Pretorius. After these two battles of succession, Dingane's prime minister and commander in both the Battle of Maqonqe and the Battle of Blood River, general Ndlela, was strangled to death by Dingane on account of high treason. General Ndlela had been the personal protector of prince Mpande, who after the Battles of Blood River and Maqongqe, became king and founder of the Zulu dynasty.