Broken Rules
Broken Rules is a project that speaks of the power of women in Nepal. All the women in this project share one characteristic: to be the first women to have broken rules in their native Nepal. They are representatives of change.
My inspiration to use handmade backdrops came from seeing old photographs that I often found in people’s houses. These photographs are always placed in special corners of houses and usually the people photographed wear traditional clothes and display very serious expressions.
I decided to reverse that common form of portraiture, allowing each woman to represent herself in her portrait, thereby opening a visual debate of what being a woman means in a changing society like Nepal. The series was shot in a studio setting and I enjoyed the creative challenge of taking photos of people in a restricted frame: using the traditional handmade backdrops forced me and the women to explore new ways of portraiture.
The photographs include short statements by each woman to highlight their work and carry messages of inspiration, frustration or change.
Broken Rules is a project that speaks of the power of women in Nepal. All the women in this project share one characteristic: to be the first women to have broken rules in their native Nepal. They are representatives of change.
My inspiration to use handmade backdrops came from seeing old photographs that I often found in people’s houses. These photographs are always placed in special corners of houses and usually the people photographed wear traditional clothes and display very serious expressions.
I decided to reverse that common form of portraiture, allowing each woman to represent herself in her portrait, thereby opening a visual debate of what being a woman means in a changing society like Nepal. The series was shot in a studio setting and I enjoyed the creative challenge of taking photos of people in a restricted frame: using the traditional handmade backdrops forced me and the women to explore new ways of portraiture.
The photographs include short statements by each woman to highlight their work and carry messages of inspiration, frustration or change.