IN/VISIBLE

India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Uganda, Nepal, Cambodia - 2013 / 2014


This post is also available in: French

It is their scars which catch the eye. People look at them either openly or more discreetly. Some avert their eyes immediately because they feel uncomfortable or want to forget what they have just seen. It is easier for society not to acknowledge those who are different, to ignore them or even to make them invisible. So it is that survivors of fire or acid attacks suffer not only from their scars all their lives, but also from other people’s reactions to their disfigurements, which banish them to the fringes of society.
For my long-term project IN/VISIBLE I travelled to India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Uganda, Nepal and Cambodia over the past two years to document, portray and interview female survivors of fire and acid attacks. My approach was to closely document the daily life of each woman in each of these six countries, to show what it means to live with the stigma of an outcast in each case. I wanted to capture their daily life, their will to survive, how they rebuilt their lives as well as their moments of despair, joy and happiness.
One of the women I met is Chantheoun from Cambodia. Twelve years ago a jealous spouse threw acid on her. The acid ate away parts of her face, her arms and her chest, leaving the 39-year old with vast disfiguring scars. In the years after the attack she did not dare to venture outside. She was scared of the reactions of her neighbours and others. She isolated herself from society. Her only support came from her mother and sisters: “I have stopped thinking of myself since I have lost my beauty“, she says today. Flavia from Uganda, Neehaari from India, Renuka from Nepal, Farida from Bangladesh and Nusrat from Pakistan, who all have experienced their own tragedy, allowed me to share intimate moments in their lives and showed me what real heroism means. The photographs are a small selection showing their daily lives, their struggles, their strength and determination. Attached in the captions are also transcribed interviews to reveal more of their lives and emotions.
Apart from these six, I portrayed forty-eight other women, eight in each of the six countries. With the portrait series I wanted to give them the opportunity to present themselves as individuals beyond the collective stigma of being branded. The neutral black backdrop was intended to abstract from the social environment and to give them an atmosphere of security and a special – if celebratory – framework. A framework, in which they felt able to present themselves and take the pose that they felt comfortable with, rather than to be presented as tragic victims. The aim was to highlight inner strength and peace they have gained after all the struggles and pain they’ve gone through. I wanted to give them a face again, to make them visible.
The women I visited are just a few of the many that are attacked with acid or fire to purposely disfigure or kill them. Officially around 1500 acid attacks are reported worldwide every year, the majority of which are aimed at women. The number of unreported cases is estimated to be much higher. For fear of reprisal the survivors do not dare to press charges against the culprits. It is even more difficult to grasp the number of those that were set on fire with kerosene or of those trying to commit suicide by setting themselves on fire to escape a dismal live of abuse and repression at the hands of husbands or in-laws. Those kinds of attacks are mostly covered up as household accidents.
Corruption, a weak rule of law and a culturally rooted discrimination against women are a fertile breeding ground for such attacks and for attempts at self-immolation. Common motives are jealousy, spurned love, infidelity, and disputes over dowries or land.
While many culprits walk free, the survivors of the acid or fire attacks suffer lifelong physical and emotional pain. I wanted to capture the beauty and self-confidence hidden behind the disfiguring scars of these women and I want to make them visible to society once again.

photographs by Ann-Christine WOEHRL

From 19/05/2015 to 19/07/2015
Galerie FAIT & CAUSE
58 rue Quincampoix
75004 Paris
France

Opening hours : Tuesday to Saturday from 14:00 to 19:00
Free admission

Phone : 01 42 74 26 36
contact@sophot.com
www.sophot.com