honorable mention
Ingetje Tadros australia
title
Feed The Little Children
This is mainly for families who are unable to provide their children with basic support due to financial problems, substance abuse and other reasons. Often children are reluctant to stay in these homes and take to the streets. Feed The Little Children aims to keep kids at home by providing nutritional meals. Feed The Little Children started in 2007 by Clint and Debbie Duncan and is run by a passionate group of Volunteers. For this time being they go out in two separate vehicles every Friday and Saturday night and feed about 300 kids a night.
She is the recipient of several of photography’s most significant awards. A short list includes the International Loupe Awards (AUS), Black and White Spider Awards (USA), PX3 Competition (Paris), The Juliet Margaret Cameron Award for Women 2013 (UK) and the International Portrait Awards 2013 (USA).
Currently, Ingetje works as a documentary photographer based in Broome on Australia’s vast, beautiful, wild and unforgiving West coast. She works regularly on assignment for some of the world’s most prestigious online and print magazines. Her clients have included, Australian Geographic, The Australian, The Internationalist, News Corp, Getty Images and many more.
Tadros, ethos is rooted in social documentary photography and being a storyteller. Her ongoing documentary photography involves interacting closely in other people’s lives; firstly to tell their stories at a community level and then to provide a conduit for communication between different cultures on a global platform.
She occupies a significant place upon the landscape of photography in Australia and internationally. Her creative vision has been the catalyst for authoring several documentary projects as diverse as leprosy in India to trans-sexuality in Asia and death rituals in Egypt.
Ingetje’s ongoing recent and important work involves documenting the complexities of race and culture of Australia’s indigenous people – the Aboriginals.
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entry description
Feed The Little Children is a Non Profit, based in Broome, Western Australia. Their mission is to provide a fully funded food service direct to children who are at risk (anyone under the age of eighteen years) 365 days a year.This is mainly for families who are unable to provide their children with basic support due to financial problems, substance abuse and other reasons. Often children are reluctant to stay in these homes and take to the streets. Feed The Little Children aims to keep kids at home by providing nutritional meals. Feed The Little Children started in 2007 by Clint and Debbie Duncan and is run by a passionate group of Volunteers. For this time being they go out in two separate vehicles every Friday and Saturday night and feed about 300 kids a night.
about the photographer
Ingetje Tadros was born in Holland and now lives in Broome Australia. In her formative years, Ingetje constantly documented life and people around her. Ingetje extended her photographic practice by combining her passion to travel with photography. Leaving Holland to travel globally Ingetje has photographed exhaustively in scores of countries.She is the recipient of several of photography’s most significant awards. A short list includes the International Loupe Awards (AUS), Black and White Spider Awards (USA), PX3 Competition (Paris), The Juliet Margaret Cameron Award for Women 2013 (UK) and the International Portrait Awards 2013 (USA).
Currently, Ingetje works as a documentary photographer based in Broome on Australia’s vast, beautiful, wild and unforgiving West coast. She works regularly on assignment for some of the world’s most prestigious online and print magazines. Her clients have included, Australian Geographic, The Australian, The Internationalist, News Corp, Getty Images and many more.
Tadros, ethos is rooted in social documentary photography and being a storyteller. Her ongoing documentary photography involves interacting closely in other people’s lives; firstly to tell their stories at a community level and then to provide a conduit for communication between different cultures on a global platform.
She occupies a significant place upon the landscape of photography in Australia and internationally. Her creative vision has been the catalyst for authoring several documentary projects as diverse as leprosy in India to trans-sexuality in Asia and death rituals in Egypt.
Ingetje’s ongoing recent and important work involves documenting the complexities of race and culture of Australia’s indigenous people – the Aboriginals.
back to gallery