Nasrul Eam

Nasrul Eam (December 1 1983) is a documentary photographer of people and nature, born in Bangladesh. He is a photographer and writer of the Digital Age.

Biography
Before coming into photography, he worked as a web designer, made several animation advertising films, and finally settled on photography.

About his photography Eam wrote:
Photography is about the frame you put around an image. What’s comes in or what cuts off yet the story does not end. It tells beyond the frame through a kind of intuition. My goal is to capture that moment and expression in the frame with pure authenticity. The expression on a person’s face and eyes tell the story, the situation, and his /her background.I love to take photographs of people in nature and their lifestyle.

The Happy Children of the Third World
Published by Image of the Centuries (October 2008), The Happy Children of the Third World portrays the life of the children in developing countries.

Eam gives an account of writing The Happy Children of the Third World in an interview: I want to express my art in a divine way. Third world countries like Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, India, Thailand in South and South East Asia are blessed with splendid beauty. If we look back at the history, human civilization rise and fall, environment and climate change shape the human civilization. The key was the shifting and drying up of rivers.
Writing a book representing Bangladesh, I followed the river root which started from the Gangetic plain towards the Bay of Bengal. You know the highlight of Bangladesh is Bangladesh itself. The children in the streets, in the villages, in the banks of the rivers give an insight to their country in the most marvelous way. Their natural smiling faces are untouched by poverty or hazards. Volume one of my book contains photographs of the ever smiling children from the streets of Bangladesh to its inland villages and coastal areas. In another part, I focused on the climate change. How the river moves, how they flood the old village and give birth to new ones like the unbroken thread of human civilization. In the end, I articulate nature’s own truth with the present environmental issues. An artistic photograph always conveys the true essence of life in a way no words can. So, I tried to blend my photography and the message within minimalistic design.
 
< Prev   Next >