Africa-Press – Gambia. The London-born photographer on his image of Gambian football fans.TBrunel had been living alongside the boys for two weeks, documenting the work of the charity, which serves as a community school while providing boarding places for orphans. He’d left his digital camera in his room and knew the moment would pass if he went back for it. So he reached for his iPhone. The photograph’s angle was a spur-of-the-moment decision, chosen simply to fit as many faces in as possible; he added the black and white “Noir” filter later.I wanted the focus to be on their faces as they saw themselves on the screen, and their smiles. Many of the boys are orphans: all have lost at least one parent, like Musa. But there is rarely a moment when they aren’t smiling,” Johnson says. “As a Black photographer of African heritage, it’s my responsibility to authentically document the reality of Africa, in all its beauty and in its poverty. And you can show poverty while still maintaining human dignity.”we have a small favour to ask. Millions are turning to the Guardian for open, independent, quality news every day, and readers in 180 countries around the world now support us financially.
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