The Julie Project, 1993 - 2010


'Darcy Padilla is a photojournalist and documentary photographer living in San Francisco, California. She is published internationally and her awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Alexia Foundation Professional Grant, an Open Society Institute Individual Fellowship and a Getty Images Grant for Editorial Photography. In 2010 Padilla was honored with the W. Eugene Smith Grant for Humanistic Photography for The Julie Project, which captured the story of the life and death of Julie Baird over the span of 18 years.'

Na minha opinião este é um dos melhores trabalhos apresentados no WPP por primar tanto a pesquisa feita como pelo lado emocional que as fotografias carregam até ao último dia de Julie. Um trabalho de Darcy Padilla que mereceu o 2º lugar. (Contemporary Issues: 2º prize stories) no WPP deste ano.

'I first met Julie on February 28, 1993. Julie, 18, stood
in the lobby of the Ambassador Hotel, barefoot, pants
unzipped, and an 8 day-old infant in her arms. She lived
in San Francisco’s SRO district, a neighborhood of soup
kitchens and cheap rooms. Her room was piled with clothes,
overfull ashtrays and trash. She lived with Jack, father
of her first baby Rachael, and who had given her AIDS.
She left him months later to stop using drugs.

Her first memory of her mother is getting drunk with her
at 6 and then being sexually abused by her stepfather.
She ran away at 14 and became drug addict at 15. Living in
alleys, crack dens, and bunked with more dirty old men
than she cared to count.

For the last 18 years I have photographed Julie Baird’s
complex story of multiple homes, AIDS, drug abuse,
abusive relationships, poverty, births, deaths, loss
and reunion. Following Julie from the backstreets of
San Francisco to the backwoods of Alaska.
'