Gitmo at Home, Gitmo at Play
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Dates2014 - 2015
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Author
122 men are still imprisoned at the U.
122 men are still imprisoned at the U.S. Naval Base in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, known as "Gitmo." Most have been held for 13 years without charge, trial or conviction, but were cleared for release years ago. Rather than replicating images already emblazoned on our collective consciousness - orange jumpsuits, barbed wire - I look at the grim absurdity of this place through images of residential and leisure spaces for all those displaced here: both prisoners and the military personnel who guard them. The design of military spaces - "normal," "American," "fun" - is in stark contrast to the spaces available to those held inside the prison camps, a disconnect that speaks to the uneasy exercise of power in America's offshore prison paradise. On my most recent (third) trip, I shot and developed medium format film in a Navy Lodge bathroom under the watch of military escorts as a condition of making analog images in the prison camps. I am the only person ever to have done this under the highly restrictive regulations now operative for photographers, which among other things require "Operational Security Review" of every image every day, and consent to the deletion of any image violating military regulations.