41 uncensored instagrams from North Korea by David Guttenfelder - Page 3 of 5
▻http://justsomething.co/41-uncensored-instagrams-from-north-korea-by-david-guttenfelder/3
41 uncensored instagrams from North Korea by David Guttenfelder
41 uncensored instagrams from North Korea by David Guttenfelder - Page 3 of 5
▻http://justsomething.co/41-uncensored-instagrams-from-north-korea-by-david-guttenfelder/3
41 uncensored instagrams from North Korea by David Guttenfelder
A North Korean road trip – in pictures
▻http://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2014/oct/24/sp-north-korea-pictures-road-trip
Associated Press team granted rare permission to spend a week travelling the country from Pyongyang to Mount Paektu – as long as they stayed with a minder, didn’t wander off course and didn’t speak to anyone unauthorised
L’hommage d’AP à #Anja_Niedringhaus, #photographe_de_guerre tuée en Afghanistan - La Libre.be
▻http://www.lalibre.be/dernieres-depeches/afp/l-hommage-d-ap-a-anja-niedringhaus-photographe-de-guerre-tuee-en-afghanistan
« Ce que les gens savent de l’Irak, ils le savent en grande partie grâce à ses photos et aux photos prises par les photographes qu’elle a épaulés et mis en condition », explique le photographe de AP David Guttenfelder. « Je sais qu’ils se demandent à chaque fois : +Qu’est-ce que ferait Anja dans ce cas ?+ lorsqu’ils partent sur le terrain avec leurs appareils. Nous le faisons tous ».
En Bosnie
Revealing more of North Korea (The Big Picture)
►http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2012/09/revealing_more_of_north_korea.html
North Korea remains a mystery to most of the West, but through small glimpses into the daily life of North Koreans, more and more is revealed about this mysterious country. Associated Press photographers David Guttenfelder and Vincent Yu have been fortunate to have unprecedented access to some areas in Pyongyang, the country’s largest city by both land area and population. Through their images, we learn just a little bit more about what it’s like to live in one of the world’s most militarized and isolated countries. (...) Source: The Big Picture
Wrong turn grants glimpse behind North Korean curtain | World news | guardian.co.uk
►http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/apr/13/north-korea-real-life-press-bus
Ça c’est plutôt marrant. Le Bus des journalistes se trompe de route et soudain apparaît aux journalistes médusés, un pays qu’ils ne connaissent pas...
Wrong turn grants glimpse behind North Korean curtain
It’s hard to know what is real in North Korea, but foreign press got a chance to see life behind the facade by accident
Tim Sullivan, Associated Press in Pyongyang
guardian.co.uk, Friday 13 April 2012
North Korea: real life on the streets
North Korean residents of the capital city mingle on the side of the street in Pyongyang Photograph: David Guttenfelder/AP
The press bus took a wrong turn - and suddenly, everything changed in the official showcase of North Korean achievement.
A cloud of dust swirled down deeply potholed streets, past concrete apartment buildings crumbling at the edges. Elderly people trudged along the pavement, some with handmade backpacks crafted from canvas bags. Two men in wheelchairs waited at a bus stop. There were shops with no lights, and unsurfaced sidestreets.
Ordinary North Koreans stared unabashedly at the 50 or so foreign reporters on a rare trip to this secretive, autocratic nation as it honoured its founder, heralded its new leader and prepared for Friday’s satellite launch - an apparent failure that Washington said was really a test of missile technology.
Japan’s nuclear exclusion zone
►http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2011/12/japans_nuclear_exclusion_zone.html
What does a sudden evacuation look like? After everyone is gone, what happens to the places they’ve abandoned? National Geographic Magazine sent Associated Press photographer David Guttenfelder to the nuclear exclusion zone around Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi power plant to find out.
In this July 13, 2011 photo, cans of beer lie dislodged inside a flood-damaged vending machine in an abandoned neighborhood in Naraha, Japan inside the nuclear exclusion zone. (AP Photographer David Guttenfelder on assignment for National Geographic)
#it_has_begun (je suis étonné que @arno l’ait oublié, celui-là)
Inside Japan’s Fukushima Nuclear Power Station
►http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/2011/11/14/inside-japans-fukushima-nuclear-reactor/5085
Associated Press photographer David Guttenfelder, along with other reporters, was allowed inside the Fukushima nuclear power station to witness the devastation, for the first time, caused by Japan’s March 12th earthquake and tsunami.
The Unit 4 reactor building at the crippled Tokyo Electric Power Co. (Tepco) Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear power station is seen through a bus window in Okuma Town, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, on Saturday, Nov. 12, 2011. Tepco is struggling to contain the worst nuclear disaster in 25 years. Photographer: David Guttenfelder/Pool via Bloomberg
Captured: Journey to North Korea
►http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/2011/08/11/captured-journey-to-north-korea/4585
The Associated Press recently announced that AP Photojournalist David Guttenfelder was allowed unprecedented access to photograph areas of North Korea. An article in a British paper stated, “The pictures are among the most candid ever published in Western newspapers.”
►http://denverpost.slideshowpro.com/albums/001/496/album-254239/cache/northkorea09.sJPG_950_2000_0_75_0_50_50.sJPG
Inside North Korea - Alan Taylor - In Focus - The Atlantic
►http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2011/08/inside-north-korea/100119
Earlier this year, David Guttenfelder, chief Asia photographer for the Associated Press, along with Jean H. Lee, AP bureau chief in Seoul, were granted unprecedented access to parts of North Korea as part of the AP’s efforts to expand coverage of the isolated communist nation. The pair made visits to familiar sites accompanied by government minders, and were also allowed to travel into the countryside accompanied by North Korean journalists instead of government officials. Though much of what the AP journalists saw was certainly orchestrated, their access was still remarkable. Collected here are some of Guttenfelder’s images from the trip that provide a glimpse of
North Korea.