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Biography
Connie Frisbee Houde,
a photojournalist, has traveled to Afghanistan for
the past three years. In 2004 and 2005 she
traveled deep into the heart of Afghanistan
photographing the National Organization of
Ophthalmic Rehabilitation (NOOR), the country’s
singular eye care program.
Audiences have been
captivated by her depth of understanding of the
complexities of the history and current situation
in Afghanistan and her ability to synthesize this
knowledge into moving audiovisual experiences that
bring her lectures about her experience to life.
Connie’s
impacting work has been shown in dozens of
galleries and her informative multi-media
presentations depicting the realities of life in
Afghanistan have illuminated audiences. Frisbee
Houde says, “While in
Afghanistan I quickly fell in love with the people
I met - the noble faces of the men, the strength
of the women and the poignant beauty of the
children whose eyes were windows to their souls. I
am not simply looking at the Afghans through my
lens, I am capturing them looking back at us."
Connie was recently awarded a 2006 New York
State Council on the Arts Grant to
photograph and record the harrowing and untold
stories of escape and resettlement in the US, of
some of the over 3000 Afghans who now live in the
capital district. She began recording,
photographing and exhibiting this material in 2005
and has seen the healing effects these stories
have not only for the teller, but also for the
people of their new country whom have also felt
the effect of the war in Afghanistan. Her project
has helped to bridge the differences and to
recognize the similarities between these two
groups whose lives have been affected by the
horror of war.
This project is one example of how she uses her
vision as a photographer to
depict the spirit and sacredness of people and
their surroundings. The cultural heritage and way
of life of many different people are often
threatened by global events, war and
industrialization. Connie’s skill as a
photographer coupled with her love of humanity
enable her to depict the nobleness of these people
and their lands as they strive to keep their
autonomy, culture and community alive. While each
group maintains its own cultural identity many
attributes, expressions and concerns of living are
universal, creating a sense of brotherhood, a
global village.
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