Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Day 4231: Long Hair and Talk radio.

 

     

"Hopeless": photo, digital collage


 

 

 



  

Want music?

 

    

Click : Al Green, Let's Stay Together

 


  

 

 
2GN2S


‘Las Pelilargas,’ by Irina Werning Celebrates the Long Hair of Latin American Women and Girls


All images © Irina Werning, shared with permission


For the last 17 years, Irina Werning has traveled throughout Latin America photographing women and girls for her ongoing series, Las Pelilargas, or The Longhairs. Shot in color and black and white, the portraits document a distinct cultural practice through an incredibly alluring, even surreal lens. Many subjects are camouflaged behind their cascading locks, their identities obscured by hair that appears to consume their bodies whole.



Werning began Las Pelilargas in 2006 when people connected with one another primarily offline. “Back then, in the absence of social media, I would travel to mountain towns and stay there for months, putting up signs in markets, schools to find them, and even organizing long hair competitions."



For many Indigenous communities in Argentina where Werning is based, and throughout Latin America more broadly, hair spiritually tethers women to nature and larger practices advocating respect and care for the earth. As she recently wrote in Vogue, “A leader of the Kolla community (Argentina’s largest Indigenous population) once told me: ‘Your hair is important; that’s your connection to the land. It’s the teaching that’s been passed down from generation to generation.'”



While her approaches to identifying subjects and pinpointing unique ways to share their stories have shifted since the project started, Werning’s intent has remained constant: to honor and celebrate “their long hair, the patience and love and dedication of years of growing it.” Her photographs feature an array of settings, from desert landscapes and equestrian training facilities to locker rooms and theater balconies, and each has an element of play, whether it be two young girls sharing a hairstyle with a horse or another strands taped to a wall like a pinwheel.



Werning was awarded this year’s W. Eugene Smith Grant, a significant award that will allow her to return to the towns and people she’s photographed over the years. She plans to explore how globalization has impacted hair traditions and produce a book to wrap up the series. She explains:

What makes Latin America distinct is the fusion of these Indigenous traditions with the waves of immigration, creating a remarkably hybrid population. For me, this project is an anthropological study to help me understand the origins and cultural identity of Latin America today: a story of cultures mixing and old traditions bumping into new ones.





Find more from Las Pelilargas in Werning’s portfolio, and follow her on Instagram to stay updated on the project.




 

 


Recently, I had a blog featuring old radios at the Hilbert Museum, here. A great artist and friend, Norma Prickett, replied with a sweet family story  and I asked if I could share it? She said. "Sure."

 

"Love the old radios. My mother in law loved radios. When she passed we found some old radios from the 40s, unfortunately I gave all to the Goodwill. Wish I would have kept one."

"Every night she would sleep with a transistor radio under her pillow and carry it around in her apron pocket all day. Always listening to talk radio. We buried her with her favorite, so she could still listen to talk radio."
 
 


 
 
 

  
 
A 5 minute video,  good education , here
 
 
 
 
 
Just because ...
 

 


Wednesday's Smiles ...  

 





 


  


  
   
 
 

 


   




   

  
  



 
 
 
 
 
 




4 comments:

john said...

Great effect. It does show hopelessness. :-)

elenor said...

Today I especially loved the story your friend Norma Prickett told about her mother in law. I guess I have an idea what a radio meant to her. It brought the whole world into her life and she always felt connected with it. What do you think, Jacki?

jacki long said...

Thank, John. Too true.

jacki long said...

Thank you, Elenor, me too. I just loved that sweet story and your sweet reply. I sent it on to Norma, who had commented that her Mother-in-law would have loved the story being on the blog. Full circle. ;o)