Wednesday, 24 March 2010

Eli Khoury


Eli Khoury was one of the key figures behind the Cedar revolution, which booted the Syrians out of the country after Prime Minister Rafik Hariri's assassination in 2005.
This was probably my favourite portrait session so far: a whole hour and a half while Khoury, head of Quantum advertising agency and owner of Now Lebanon news service, among other things, was interviewed for the magazine. Such a different feel from the usual five-minute CEO circus and tonnes of time to try different lighting set ups in their space-age 'Quantum Towers' office. Even the tea mugs made me look dowdy.

Wednesday, 17 March 2010

Carlos Slim does Beirut

Carlos Slim: he's only the richest man in the world! Not the most engaging speaker on the planet but he still filled the business school lecture hall at AUB this afternoon.
These students weren't so pleased that a country as poverty stricken as Mexico could also provide the worlds wealthiest.
In other rich people news, here's Carlos Ghosn, head of Nissan and Renault.

Monday, 15 March 2010

Tea with Fatah

Changes to the Fatah leadership inside Lebanon's camps has been causing something of a ruckus of late, so myself and reporter Josh Wood took a trip to Badawi camp north of Tripoli to find out more from his friendly Fatah contact. While waiting for him to arrive we shared tea and watched some fairly 'unique' chess being played. We ran out of time for a walk around the camp but should be back up there soon, this time with my umbrella for some proper portraits. Should be fun.



Tuesday, 9 March 2010

Palestinian refugee camps - Esquire


Here's a sneaky peek at a rough version of a ten page spread looking at Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon, which I worked on with freelancer Josh Wood for Esquire Magazine's Middle East edition - it should be out in glossy goodness next month. This was a fascinating project to work on, possibly one of the most important issues facing the region, so props to the Esquire guys for giving it the coverage it deserves.








Iraqi elections

Iraqi voters in Lebanon took to the polls over the weekend to take part in their national elections. The ink stained finger shows that a vote has been cast.