This is the latest note we have received from him:
JR continues on his 28 Millimeter: WOMEN Project. The next stage promises to be the most ambitious of all.
Finally, more than a year after he took the original pictures, JR has returned to Kibera, Kenya. He was reunited with the women who had accepted to be part of the project at the end of 2007. Whilst some of them had had to leave the slum during the post election riots of 2008, others were still there and are now helping implement. The art performance will be ready for Friday 30 January 2009 and is taking place in the heart of Kibera, one of the largest slum of Africa.
2000 square meters of rooftops will be covered with photos of the eyes and faces of the women of Kibera. Most of the women will have their own photos on their own rooftop and for the first time the material used is water resistant so that the photo itself will protect the fragile houses in the heavy rain season. It will be interesting to see what other uses the photographs will be put to come the 31st January. Before that though, they will be on view from Google Earth and the railway line that passes above them.
Finally, more than a year after he took the original pictures, JR has returned to Kibera, Kenya. He was reunited with the women who had accepted to be part of the project at the end of 2007. Whilst some of them had had to leave the slum during the post election riots of 2008, others were still there and are now helping implement. The art performance will be ready for Friday 30 January 2009 and is taking place in the heart of Kibera, one of the largest slum of Africa.
2000 square meters of rooftops will be covered with photos of the eyes and faces of the women of Kibera. Most of the women will have their own photos on their own rooftop and for the first time the material used is water resistant so that the photo itself will protect the fragile houses in the heavy rain season. It will be interesting to see what other uses the photographs will be put to come the 31st January. Before that though, they will be on view from Google Earth and the railway line that passes above them.
Meanwhile
the train that passes on this line through Kibera at least twice a day
will be covered with eyes from the women that live below it. It will
also be pasted with eyes of the women of Brazil, India, Cambodia, and
other parts of Africa whose stories and image continue to travel. With
the eyes on the train, the bottom half of the their faces will be
pasted on corrugated sheets on the slope that leads down from the
tracks to the rooftops. The idea being that for the split second the
train passes, their eyes will match their smiles and their faces will
be complete.
For more photos and informations on the project please see : http://28millimetres.com/ women/?ke
For more photos and informations on the project please see : http://28millimetres.com/







