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Editorial photography

7 galleries

Editorial stories: Reportage and visual storytelling.

Photojournalism assignments for top media outlets on current affairs (stories) and spot news (singles).

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  • Cuba: Out of the shadows
    Cuba: Out of the shadows
    10 images
    Street scenes and people of Cuba. December 2014.
  • Indonesia's Nazi re-enactors
    Indonesia's Nazi re-enactors
    12 images
    Members of the 'Niederlande Kampfgruppe' group meet regularly to re-enact battles wearing Nazi Waffen-SS military uniforms and produce their own photos and videos. They claim that they do not do this because they identify ideologically with the Nazis, but because they are interested in World War II and military history. According to them, there is historical evidence that at least one Indonesian person was part of the 'Freiwilligen Legion Niederlande', the Dutch arm of the Waffen-SS, during World War II. Similar re-enactment groups exist in several cities across Indonesia, using the uniforms of Dutch, German and Japanese troops.
  • Indonesia: Local food production in Java
    Indonesia: Local food production in...
    21 images
    Assignment for Oxfam Australia about community leader Suparjiyem and locally produced food in Gunung Kidul district, Yogyakarta Special Region, Indonesia, 2013
  • Niger: Sahel food crisis
    Niger: Sahel food crisis
    5 images
    Portraits of mothers/grandmothers, their children/grandchildren, and the food they consume, in Niger, 2012
  • Indonesia: Years of Living Dangerously, Harrison Ford
    Indonesia: Years of Living Dan...
    2 galleries
  • Indonesia: Pollution in the Citarum river
    Indonesia: Pollution in the Citarum...
    24 images
    People living by the Citarum river in West Java, Indonesia, 2012
  • Argentina: Ocho de Mayo
    Argentina: Ocho de Mayo
    22 images
    Ocho de Mayo is an informal settlement in the district of General Saint Martín, Buenos Aires, Argentina. The neighborhood is named after the date in which the first settlers moved in, on the 8th of May of 1998. Today, Ocho de Mayo is home to about 1,500 families, many of them young. Of the 5,000 residents, 3,000 are under 16. About 65 percent of the population is Paraguayan. The rest are from nearby towns or elsewhere in Argentina. This neighborhood does not look very different from the villas miseria —slums or shantytowns— that ring the Argentine capital. Photo essay shot in January 2006.

Rodrigo Ordóñez Photography

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