What do Afghan women look like?
From a mini-documentary filmed in Brooklyn. Release date: 2023.
Credits: Director, Executive Producer
Cinematographer: Gzim Gjonbalaj (@offjimmer)
Baraye Avaleen Bar
ARTIST STATEMENT
Tintype, a photographic process from the 19th century, is historically rooted in documenting war, including both soldiers and combat zones. Baraye Avaleen Bar turns the lens on a community heavily impacted by militarization, one that's not often heard or even seen. These eight faces represent the diversity and richness of Afghanistan’s many ethnic groups, honoring the millions impacted by war. Our message: We are more than victims and Afghanistan is more than a battlefield — it is our home.
The story of this exhibit began in March 2022, after Jones first captured Ali on tintype. A tintype is made by creating a direct positive on a thin sheet of metal that is then coated with a dark enamel. This is used as the support for the photographic emulsion: iodized collodion dipped in a silver nitrate solution. The metal sheet, still wet, is exposed in camera to create a one-off photochemical object.
Ali was taken by the ancestral beauty tintype provides, so she went on to look for more tintypes of Afghans. Not only could she find no images of Afghans, but she discovered that the most renowned tintypes were of soldiers who served in Afghanistan. Both artists, focused on women's safety, were inspired to create a space to pay homage to the forgotten heroes of war: women. Ali cast sisters, mothers, daughters, refugees, immigrants and US-born Afghans alike. Jones created their tintypes on August 5, 2022.
This collection titled “Baraye Avaleen Bar” by artists Yeldā Ali (@y3lda) and Angela Jones (@image.atlas) exhibited at the Ace Hotel New York from November 3, 2022 to January 25, 2023.
Videographer: Alex Colby (@alexkwoncolby)
Photographer: Ester Segretto (@estersegrettophotography)
Alex Kwon Colby




















Land of the Free
ARTIST STATEMENT
American children grow up intimately familiar with the Star Spangled Banner’s proclamation of freedom. With the world’s highest incarceration rate and largest incarcerated population, we ask: for whom is this land free?
This billboard titled “Land Of The Free” by artists Florian Koenigsberger (@floriankoenigsberger), Yeldā Ali (@y3lda), Silas Lee (@bludshot), Samuel Kang (@_samuelkofficial) has been installed in Hartford, CT as part of the @forfreedoms campaign #AnotherJustice: By Any Medium Necessary—an invitation to rethink what justice can be in a time of imbalance. More than 50 artworks have been installed on billboards across the United States imagining what a just world could look like.
Photographer: Taisuke Yamada (@waniwanipanicdj)
Learn more at forfreedoms.com

