Development action with informed and engaged societies
After nearly 28 years, The Communication Initiative (The CI) Global is entering a new chapter. Following a period of transition, the global website has been transferred to the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) in South Africa, where it will be administered by the Social and Behaviour Change Communication Division. Wits' commitment to social change and justice makes it a trusted steward for The CI's legacy and future.
 
Co-founder Victoria Martin is pleased to see this work continue under Wits' leadership. Victoria knows that co-founder Warren Feek (1953–2024) would have felt deep pride in The CI Global's Africa-led direction.
 
We honour the team and partners who sustained The CI for decades. Meanwhile, La Iniciativa de Comunicación (CILA) continues independently at cila.comminitcila.com and is linked with The CI Global site.
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Through Positive Eyes

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"The participants' visual explorations communicate the challenges facing HIV-positive people around the world: stigma, fear, and access to treatment, among others."

Through Positive Eyes is designed to give photographic voice to people living with HIV in major cities around the world. It is based on the belief that HIV-positive people should pick up their own cameras and make their own artistic statements. In doing so, the organiser - University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Art & Global Health Center (AGHC) - hopes that they create powerful tools for combating stigma: "one of the most formidable barriers in reducing the spread of AIDS today". The project is co-directed by London, United Kingdom (UK)-based South African photographer and AIDS activist Gideon Mendel, who has been chronicling HIV and AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa since 1993.

Communication Strategies

Through Positive Eyes is based on the belief that challenging stigma against people living with HIV/AIDS is an effective method for combating the epidemic - and that art is a powerful way to do this. The project is in the process of creating an international album of personal photo essays created by people living with HIV/AIDS, drawn from 10-day workshops in major cities around the globe. According to one person involved with the initiative, "[i]n an attempt to redress a common absence in AIDS advocacy work, the insights of people living with HIV are central to this project." Since 2007, dozens of HIV-positive people on 5 continents have taken part. Their work can be found on the Through Positive Eyes website and in exhibitions around the world. Through Positive Eyes was initially conceived and implemented in pilot form in Los Angeles, California, United States (US) in February 2007. Since then, it has been produced in Mexico City, Mexico (August 2008), Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (June 2009), Johannesburg, South Africa (March 2010), and Washington, DC, US (July 2012).

 

In each project city, prior to the start of the project, a local partner organisation selects a group of HIV-positive people, who then take part in an intensive workshop directed by Gideon Mendel and photo educator Crispin Hughes. The workshop is designed to teach people with no prior visual training to express themselves using small high-resolution digital cameras. Next, Mendel travels to the home or workplace of each participant to make a portrait and to film him or her in personal surroundings. Alongside the visual process, organisers record interviews with each participant, asking him or her to share life stories, experiences, and challenges faced when living with HIV and AIDS. The interviews are transcribed so that they exist in both audio and text format. At the close of the project, control is turned over to the local partnering organisation, which maintains contact with project participants and continues to nurture their growth as artists and activists through photography workshops, leadership training, and grassroots exhibition of materials.

 

This combination of participants' images and text, as well as portraits by Mendel, creates the following outputs:

  • Through Positive Eyes website, which includes the work from each country, presenting photo essays and text from all participants, along with edited films for some. The images in Through Positive Eyes do not necessarily depict sickness, but more often, show ordinary moments in the participants' lives.
  • Short films composed of still images and recorded stories: These 3-minute films are designed to serve as advocacy tools that can be disseminated via the internet, or on DVD. The films combine still photographs, video clips, and recorded voices of the participants. [To request materials, contact Kristin Killacky, Producer, at kkillacky@arts.ucla.edu].
  • Mobile exhibitions: Combining participant photographs, Mendel's portraits, and narratives, exhibitions can be mounted on portable frames designed specifically for this purpose. The mobility of this exhibition is key, as it enables display in any number of public sites including galleries and museums but also schools, healthcare facilities, prisons, markets, etc.
Development Issues

HIV/AIDS.

Key Points

"'There's a healing process for me personally, as far as stigma within myself,' said Mary Bowman, a 23-year-old Washington-based poet and activist who participated in the last workshop held there [as part of Through Positive Eyes]...'Self-stigma made me go into a hole...'...Ms. Bowman still thinks about the days before she had to constantly talk about - and represent - H.I.V. But she said it's worth the emotional support and gratitude she gets in return through exhibits like these."

 

The UCLA Art & Global Health Center seeks to nurture a global network of artists and advocates working in the realm of public health.

Sources

UCLA AGHC website, August 14 2012; "Through Positive Eyes", by Patricia Wakida, Smithsonian Folklife Festival website; "Fighting H.I.V. Stigma, Photo by Photo", by Chris Gregory and Peter Moskowitz, New York Times; and Through Positive Eyes website, August 14 2012.