Eco Photographer An interview of ethically focussed photographer, Alicia Fox in Muse Magazine Australia’s newest magazine for inspiration, self-help and culture, featured an interview about my work as an eco photographer.  The article explores my journey from being a teenager driven to fulfil my dreams of travel and photography, to the journey that entailed, learning about what is really important to me and utilising my profession to work towards a better world.   As you can read below, photography has taken me around the globe, discovering incredible cultures and learning from some of the most ancient and untouched peoples in the world today.  These lessons are priceless and I am extremely grateful for the journey thus far.   Being an eco photographer and living a sustainable lifestyle in both my professional and personal life is something extremely important to me, and something that I’ve written about in previous blog posts.  My work with indigenous groups and NGOs around the world has contributed to this greatly.  Once visiting these places and sitting to talk with the people effected by climate change, corporate greed, environmental destruction and so on, it’s impossible to turn a blind eye and un-care.   Everyone can make […] Read More
As you may have read in previous posts, while I was in India I volunteered with a wonderful organisation in Jaipur, I-India photographing 7 of their projects.  For my recent photography exhibition, One World through which I raised money for I-India, I created these information sheets to help communicate to visitors the life-changing work I-India are doing.   Please take a read through, and let me know if you would like any more information about the organisation or my time with them.  You can also watch my short video about the experience HERE.   Namaste!         Click on the posters to open them at a large resolution   See my posts about I-India’s village school and Marble village school  Read More
It seemed surreal to be standing in the middle of in an entire village made of marble.  But these weren’t palaces or majals.    The inhabitants of this marble village in Rajasthan, India are desperately poor and lack basic amenitites like running water and electricity in their homes.  Traditionally nomads, these families chose to set up their homes in the middle of a dusty industrial zone so they could repurpose, re-use and upcycle the waste from an adjacent factory to build dwellings.   I visited the village with I-India, a not-for-profit organisation in Rajasthan, India.  The dedicated staff provide education and support to some of Rajasthan’s most desperate children, feeding 3000 kids a daily meal without which their bellies would remain painfully empty.  I-India provides services to this area.                                               I-India set up a school for this community, as there were no educational facilities available to them in the area.  To see the basic facilities that these children learn in with such gratitude was so inspiring.  Read about it HERE     If you’d like to read about […] Read More
  I didn’t realise we had arrived at the school as the car pulled up outside a small shack in the middle of a dusty community.  I was with I-India for an NGO photography shoot, a small grassroots organisation based in the desert city of Jaipur, India.   As I’ll explain in another blog post, a series of coincidences had lead me to contact I-India and offer my services as a volunteer photographer.  Due to changing financial times, the not for profit organisation has seen a decline in donations from its international funders over the past couple of years which means they will probably have to cut up to 30% of their projects in the next year.     On the ground, this means that hundreds of vulnerable children will go hungry.  I met some of these children.  They are as innocent and loveable as any children I’ve met, but the fact that they were born into poverty in India means that their fate is very different from that of children where I’m from, Australia. I-India has saved them from child labour, child marriages, homelessness, begging on the streets and more. The organisation’s dedicated staff runs a range of truly […] Read More

Why be an “Eco Photographer”?

September 16, 2013 aliciafox Eco Photography, Eco Tips, Ethical Photography, Humanitarian Photography, NGO photography, Peru, Photography Tips, portrait, South America Photos, Travel Photography, Volunteering Latin America, Wellness Photographer tags: amazon portraits, amazon tribes, Australian tribe photographer, eco photographer, eco photographer australia, eco photographer sydney, eco photography, eco photography australia, eco photography sydney, ethical photographer, ethical photography, green photographer, green photography, humanitarian photo, humanitarian photographer, humanitarian photographer australia, humanitarian photographer latin America, humanitarian photographer peru, humanitarian photographer sydney, humanitarian photographs, indigenous amazon, indigenous tribes, indigenous tribes peru, latin American tribes, marrickville photographer, marrickville photography, newtown photographer, newtown photography, ngo photographer, npo photographer, npo photographer Australia, npo photographer Sydney, peru amazon, peru amazon photos, peru amazon tribes, peru portraits, peru tribes, peruvian amazon, petersham photographer, petersham photography, photographer petersham, photography petersham, photos of Amazonian tribes, photos of peru, photos of the amazon, portraits of the disappearing amazon, professional ngo photographer, professional photos of peru, professional photos of peru amazon, professional tribe photographer, sacred amazon, sustainable photographer, sustainable photography, sydney, sydney eco photographer, sydney eco photography, Sydney ethical photographer, Sydney ethical photography, Sydney tribe photographer, Sydney wellness photographer, Sydney wellness photography, tradition peru, traditional dress, traditional dress peru, traditional peru, tribe photographer, tribe portraits, tribes of the amazon, wellness photography Sydney 0 comments
Being an Eco Photographer means reducing the environmental impact of every aspect of my business, and working with (i.e. producing photos for) clients that have a positive impact on the environment.     I was trying to formulate an explanation as to why I’ve decided to be an “Eco Photographer” and what this actually means.  Then one day three things happened to me and I became so impassioned that I did what anyone would do… I got on my soapbox (i.e. my personal Facebook wall) and shared what I was feeling with my friends and family.  I received such an overwhelmingly supportive response that I decided to include my little story on this blog.  It gives you an idea of how I live my personal life, which crosses over into my business life.  So here it is:   I don’t often put unhappy things on Facebook but I feel the need to share this today  It has 3 parts, and hopefully is inspiring: 1. James came home and told me, with a smile, that he had a song stuck in his head all day, the song of some beautiful girls from the Ashaninka tribe we stayed with by Ene River, in […] Read More
My photos and I are being featured on fivepointfive.org and I think you should check it out, here.  You’ll gain an insight into my project Portraits of The Disappearing Amazon, a 3 month journey which will changed my life.  You can also get the background story on some of my favourite portraits from the project, and the beautiful people within them.   Five Point Five is about inspiring you to do those things that you will remember with satisfaction for the rest of your life.  They are all about travel, lifestyle and making a positive difference in the world – 3 things that are really important to me too.  The website offers information and mini documentaries on volunteering overseas, as well as travel resources and inspiration.  So go get inspired…   Portraits of the Disappearing Amazon by Alicia Fox Read More