Gary Knight

Gary Knight was born in 1964 in Oakham, England and was raised in the village of Knowle in the West Midlands. He attended Arden School and Solihull Sixth Form College. He left higher education mid way through his first year and started to travel in Europe and the Middle East. He began working as a photographer in the late 1980s in South East Asia and Indochina from his home in Bangkok, Thailand, where he lived variously with photographers Philip Blenkinsop, Emmanuel Dunand and Thierry Falise and writers Alan Pearce and Robert Birsel. He is married to Fiona Turner and has two children, Sophie and Sam.

Contents

Career

In January 1993 he moved to the former Yugoslavia where he became involved in documenting war crimes and crimes against humanity during the civil war. During this period he covered conflicts in Africa, the Middle East and the Balkans and worked widely in Africa, Latin America, the Middle East, South Asia, South East Asia and the Far East (including North Korea) concentrating either on Human Rights and Poverty based issues or current affairs stories for US or European media.

In 2000 with John Stanmeyer he conceived the VII Photo Agency which was launched in 2001. VII was named as the third most influential entity in photography[1] by American Photo Magazine in 2003. In 2005 Knight and a group of friends founded the Angkor Photo Festival and Angkor Photo Workshops to support emerging photographers from Asia. In 2008 he founded with Simba Gill and Mort Rosenblum the print periodical Dispatches. In recent years Knight has covered the invasion of Iraq, the occupation of Afghanistan, the civil war in Kashmir and the Asian Tsunami amongst other stories but central to his work is a commitment to address the issues that determine the survival of the world’s poor and other Human Rights issues.

His work has been widely published by media all over the world, including Newsweek, Time, The Sunday Times, The New York Times, Paris Match, Stern and National Geographic. His work has been exhibited worldwide and is in the collections of several museums and private collectors. Knight has initiated a broad programme of education with Universities and NGO’s worldwide and is the author of several essays on journalism and photography. He teaches a small number of photography workshops every year, principally in India and Cambodia: (http://www.rethink-dispatches.com/workshops/). He was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University and an INSPIRE Scholar at Tufts University in 2010. Knight lectures on photography and journalism at Tufts University where he founded and is the Director of the Program for Narrative & Documentary Practice. He resides in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Accomplishments

Founder of VII Photo Agency in 2001.

Founder of dispatches with Mort Rosenblum and Simba Gill in 2008.

Founder and Director of the Program for Narrative & Documentary Practice at Tufts University. Massachusetts. USA.

2010 Nieman Fellow at Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University.

INSPIRE Scholar at Tufts University 2010, 2011.

Lecturer at the Institute for Global Leadership at Tufts University, Boston.

Chairman of the World Press Photo Award 2008 and Jury member in 2004 and 2006.

Vice President of the Pierre and Alexandra Boulat Foundation.

Chairman of the WHO/Stop TB Photography Advisory Board 2009 to present.

Founder of the Angkor Photo Festival.

Former Board member of the Crimes of War Foundation.

Former Trustee of the Indochina Media Memorial Foundation.

Contract photographer for Newsweek Magazine from 1999 to present.

Recipient of many awards in Asia, Europe and the United States.

Juror on numerous media juries in Europe and the United States.

Monograph

Evidence - War Crimes in Kosovo, de-Mo, 2002.

Selected Group Books

"Questions without Answers", by Phaidon Press (2011)

Tsunami by de-Mo (2005)

Congo, The Forgotten War , by de-Mo (2005)

Rethink, by de-Mo (2004)

War, by VII published by de-Mo (2003)

The Eye of War, published by Orion (2003)

Sarajevo, published by Naythons (1993)

References

  1. ^ American Photo "100 Most Important People In Photography"