Ciril jazbec photographer biography books

  • Ciril Jazbec is a documentary photographer born in Slovenia in 1987.
  • Ciril Jazbec is a director, photographer, documentarian, and storyteller.
  • Ciril Jazbec In the Name of Faith?
  • Ciril Jazbec is a documentary photographer born in Slovenia in 1987. Before moving to London he studied Management in Ljubljana. He obtained his master’s degree in Photojournalism and Documentary Photography at the London College of Communication.

    He has been working as a contributing photographer for National Geographic Magazine since 2014. His work is focused on communities that are confronted by the effects of globalisation and climate change.

    For his work he was awarded – the winner of Leica Oskar Barnack Newcomer Award 2013, the winner at Photo Folio Review Les Rencontres d’Arles 2013, the winner of Magnum 30 under 30 2015, PDN’30 New and emerging photographers to watch 2016, Pictures of the Year International 2018, the winner of VISURA grant 2018, the winner of Tokyo International Photography Competition 2020 etc.

    His work has been featured in – National Geographic Magazine, The New York Times, GEO, Der Spiegel, Neu Zürcher Zeitung, Leica Fotografie International, Wir

    Leica Fotografie International M Magazine No.1

    Specialists in Author-signed Modern First Editions, offering an eclectic mix of quality stock and a fast, friendly & efficient service.

    Visit Seller's Storefront

    Seller's business information

    Blaeberry Books
    United Kingdom

    Terms of Sale:

    payment can be made via Paypal, UK Sterling cheque, cash (Sterling, US dollars or Euros) postal order, bank transfer or foreign currency cheque (subject to a �7 admin fee) Please make cheques payable to Blaeberry Books.If the book does not match the description given, please return within 14 days for a full refund. All books are first editions/first printings unless otherwise stated.


    Shipping Terms:

    Shipping costs are based on books weighing 2.2 LB, or 1 KG. If your book order is heavy or oversized, we may contact you to let you know extra shipping is required.

    Habibi

    21 December, 2019

    A model boat, made by a prisoner, floats on the Dead Sea in Palestine. Prison inmates often make objects to give to their loved ones during family visits. 

    Nearly 4,200 Palestinian security detainees are being held in Israeli prisons, according to a February 2021 report by human rights organization B’Tselem. Some face sentences of 20 years or more. To visit a Palestinian prisoner in an Israeli jail, visitors have to overcome a number of different limitations resulting from border laws, prison regulations, and restrictions set by the Israel Security Agency (ISA). Visitors are usually allowed to see prisoners only through a transparent partition, and talk to them via a telephone receiver. Conjugal visits are denied and physical contact is forbidden, except for children under the age of ten, who are allowed ten minutes at the end of each visit to embrace their fathers. Since the early 2000s, long-term Palestinian detainees hoping to raise famil

  • ciril jazbec photographer biography books