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Pure Peru

My Scholarship entry - A 'place' I have visited

South Africa | Friday, July 5, 2013 | 5 photos


Photography is heart and soul work - work that nourishes a deep aspect within (me, at least): it feeds a deeper yearning. It is the ephemeral present moment, distilled, stored, for just a little bit longer (before hard-drives melt or film fades) - it gives the moment a moment more. It has been a lifelong dream to work as a photographer (I make my trade as an artist - close enough, some suppose) - to be witness to the world's underbelly, it's sunny demeanour, it's harsh realities - to be witness to it all is a privilege few are able (or willing) to document.

For the pure and simple love of *doing* photography. That should be all one needs! Philosophy can follow - but when my heart swells at the capture of a great frame, that is something that an explanation can do little to elucidate (describe a rollercoaster to someone who has never seen one. Describe that experience. It's never as good as the real thing - it is a box in which the experience itself is limited and contained. That image is worth a thousand words).

I love photography.
It brings me joy.
I want to work for national geographic.

About loverock

The inscription below this crucifix implores the passerby to venerate this ancient symbol. What is going on in the life of the man who walks by it? Is the book in his hand a bible or a journal? Is he a believer in God? Where is he going, and why does he wear that expression of contentment? What songs play in his ears as he walks the streets of the city? Is it his, or is he one of the many who come to Lima seeking fortune? Despite widespread poverty, pollution and social inequality, the city continues to attract many from the countryside seeking a better life, another passerby in this sprawling metropolis. Another bookcover to a story I'll only have read a line of.

Catholicism, brought by the Spanish Conquistadors, left a deep mark on Peruvian society. The city center of Lima, home to almost a 3rd of Peru's 30 million inhabitants, radiates outwards from the Plaza De Armas, the central square from which all points in Peru are measured. Catholicism played a major role in Peruvian culture and society since conquest and  in some respects it's introduction wiped clean thousands of years of knowledge and belief, leading to the death and persecution of many, and as a justification for the Spanish conquest (

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