Seeing Things by David Korchin

One of the goals of Thomas Witherspoon’s not-for-profit Ears to Our World (ETOW) organization is to deliver self-powered world band receivers to schools and communities in developing regions, for education, disaster relief, and lately, to help communities with visually impaired children. These hand-cranked radios let children and families in areas without much infrastructure hear educational programming, news and health information, along with music and the arts.

This summer I had the opportunity to travel with Thomas to Belize City, where he deployed a few dozen such radios to children participating in a summer camp held each year by the Belize Council for the Visually Impaired (BCVI) in coordination with the Belize Ministry of Education. The council hosts children from all across Belize, with educational activities, arts and crafts, computer training, and being a tropical country, plenty of outdoor activities.

Miracle Malaki, a visually impaired student at the BCVI Summer Camp in Belize City, Belize, receives a self-powered radio from Ears to Our World.

As photographers, it is sobering to meet people with visual impairments. Our art begins with seeing; it is the very first step in our workflow, if you will, and without vision how can we produce, much less edit or appreciate, our work? 

What buoyed me throughout was experiencing the relentless optimism of children, their natural ability to look beyond what we could consider impediments, to grow and expand their world, and simply have fun at being kids.

Studio visit: Cindy Pease Roe by David Korchin

For Northfrkd.com I had the pleasure of photographing an artist whose work runs a range of mediums, but who always returns to the sea for inspiration. Cindy Pease Roe was heavily influenced by time spent in Northern California boat yards, and since returning to the Northeast has been plying nautical themes in watercolor, oils and intriguingly, in scultpure made from washed up beach plastic.

Hear the artist interview. And see more of the artist's work here.

The artist in her boatyard studio, Greenport NY. 

Endless Summer: the secret lives of boats by David Korchin

Poke around anyplace near water, and you're sure to find discarded pleasure craft sulking in back yards, or mouldering gamely in the crackling summmer sun, their days afloat well behind them. Some are the result of collision or poor upkeep, but most are simply past their time. The owners have passed on, or the kids' crafts replaced by other interests. Oddly, I find these old hulls congregating, as if proximity and togetherness might make their journey to the crusher more bearable. Boats have souls, you see, and we recognize this. It's why we give them names.

Discarded boats. Cutchogue, NY