About Invisible Eve by Yousef Khanfar
Published by Rizzoli, New York
“All the ladies I photographed in the Invisible Eve project were united by misfortune of circumstances and non-violent crimes. They were condemned by order of the higher and hissed by lips of the lower. I refuse to see them as inmates, and I only see them as human beings, for I believe that every person deserves a new chance at life.” – Yousef Khanfar
Invisible Eve is a harvest of women’s voices from behind prison walls. When I discovered that U.S. has the highest incarceration of woman per capita in the world, and also holds about one third of all female prisoners worldwide, I took on the project to be bridges of understanding.
Invisible Eve project is about voices of women who are cast away and forgotten behind prison walls. From their own non-violent crimes and misfortune experiences, they share words of wisdom to be inspiration for the next generation. The hope is to prevent young girls and boys from ending up in prison.
I refused to see them as inmates and I only saw them as human beings. They needed a voice and I gave them a voice. Some of their messages are insightful, powerful and some painful. For the first time, they felt they are part of the solution than part of the problem. And all in all, the project became a process of healing for them. I captured their portraits, without any makeup, with seamless white background so they can leap out of the image and leap out of whiteness.
Within Invisible Eve, you will notice range of ethnicity, age, race and alike. Some women are sentenced for life for non-violent crime, mother and daughter in the same facility, young first offenders sentenced for excessive long period of time, some were photographed in the corner of two walls as a metaphor of being trapped between the correction system and society. Also, some where photographed with their children whom pay the highest price, and many girls who have lost their hopes and dreams in life.
The Invisible Eve project, book and exhibit, have been a platform to educate and empower women through an honest and open discourse. In addition, it has offered an awareness at legislation level to change laws. Also, inspire a paradigm shift in the correction system, where now some women are giving a second chance in life through a rehab instead of a prison to become better citizens.
My hope, that one day, we as people and nation, we stop being recognized as number one in women incarceration, but be recognized as number one in respecting women and education.
About Yousef Khanfar
“To live in hearts we touch with our arts, is to never die” – In Search of Peace, Yousef Khanfar
Photographer.Writer.Humanitarian
Yousef Khanfar is an award-winning international author, photographer, and humanitarian, whose images and messages transcend the dark corridors of our world and take us to places of splendor where we can find peace and humanity.
Of Palestinian origin, Yousef was born and raised in Kuwait, where he grew up in the Middle East region exposed to images of war and violence. He needed a voice to express his inner turbulence, and photography gave him that voice. As he has said, “I have chosen to carry my camera and pen instead of guns, and promote peace around the world; I believe peace is a finer horse to ride than violence.”
At seventeen, he left for the United States, where he continues to reside and where he has found immense variety of charming sceneries. He distilled the beauty he saw around him with his camera, and as Ken Whitmire, former President of the International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum said, “Out of the Arabian Peninsula, came a lone and landless photographer who has listened to and chased the light like a predator for twenty years. He has created a breath-taking and dazzling body of work.”
In 2000, his first book was published, Voices of Light, a collection of his poetic musings and fine art landscape photographs taken throughout the world. The images in this book embody the touchable and untouchable, secretive and mysteries of nature. Yousef’s photographs are at times dreamy, at times suggestive, and other times, spiritual, a journey that takes us to the intimate corners of the Gods. He said, “As a Palestinian, maybe I lost my homeland, but the whole world landscapes became my land”
The prominent award-winning photographer Phil Borges said of Yousef’s photography “I often wake up in the middle of the night when everything is dark and silent. I turn on an overhead spotlight that casts a small pool of light on the images of my favorite art books. As I slowly turn the pages, if the work is true, I am transported into the emotional field of the artist. I use these midnight sojourns to travel the emotional spectrum. When I want to immerse myself in pure tranquility and view the eloquent images of a Master, I pick up the work of Yousef Khanfar.”
In 2003, Yousef was selected and listed as one of the World’s Top Photographers by one of the most powerful organization in London, RotoVision, among only 25 other professional photographers in the world. He received the recognition with great honor and was pleased to be selected among the elite of photography.
In 2006, his second book was published, In Search of Peace, an original body of work designed as a Visual Symphony of three movements, entitled Sublime, Freedom and Divine. In this book, Yousef aims to provoke us and lead us into dialogue and awareness of humanity and ourselves. Whether the photograph projects the conflict between earth and sky, the movements and arguments of mood, or the wreckages of souls, one always hears his symphony.
The legendary and one of the most powerful photographers of the 20th century, Gordon Parks, said about his book In Search of Peace, “Freedom, truth, justice, peace and love. Mankind should have access to any one of them. With the divine honesty of words, eyes and soul, Yousef Khanfar’s compelling work urges us to reach out and embrace all five. With a camera and a pen as weapons, he roams the corridors of hatred, evil and injustice—in an attempt to destroy them. In Search of Peace is surely a fitting title. It is also Yousef’s Symphony, one that will forever play hard and deep inside the roots of universal evil.”
In 2007 his book, In Search of Peace, was the Award winner of the 2007 IP Outstanding Book of the Year, in the Most Life-Changing category. He also was selected as artist of the year by Mont Blanc to help with UNICEF (U.N) promoting literacy and education around the world.
In 2009, The Fulbright Center for Peace in Washington, DC selected his book In Search of Peace as the book of choice to be gifted in the Global Symposium of Peaceful Nations to the top peaceful Nations of the world. The book was received with great enthusiasm and excitement.
In 2013, his third book, Invisible Eve, was published by Rizzoli, New York. The book is a about voices of women from behind prison walls who are cast away and forgotten. From their own non-violent crimes and experiences, and with their own words, they share inspiration for the next generation, in the hope to prevent young girls and boys of ending up in prison. Some of their messages are insightful, powerful and some painful. They needed a voice and Yousef gave them a voice, and for the first time in their life, they felt that they are part of the solution than part of the problem.
The famous American Photo magazine said about Invisible Eve book, “Perhaps the most striking thing about Khanfar’s portraits of women who are incarcerated for non-violent crimes is their optimistic humanism…In statements accompanying the images, most of these women seem remorseful and philosophical, but not bitter, about the crimes that got them there…”
Throughout the years, Yousef Khanfar also captured the portrait of some of the most powerful and important figures of our time including Justice Sandra Day O’Connor (The U.S. Supreme Court), Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne (House of Lords in London), Sir David Wynne (British Sculpture), Leona Mitchell (Opera Soprano), Tariq Ramadan (a Swiss academic, philosopher and writer), Sister Rosemary Nyirumbe (St. Monica’s Girls School, Uganda), Marina Carr (Irish writer), Antonio Grimaldi (Fashion designer), Bill Toledo (Navajo Wind Talker) and many more.
Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, U.S. Supreme Court, Washington, DC., who is considered as one of the most powerful women in the history of United States, said about her portrait, “I am quite stunned and overcome with the beauty of your photograph of me. Your use of light, texture and placement makes you an amazing photographer. Your book of landscapes demonstrates magnificently how well you use light. The photograph of me, which is printed now on canvas, is superb. There is no way to thank you adequately for what you have done.”
Yousef’s work has been featured in many magazines including: Oprah, International Photo Art, Amateur Photographer, Oklahoma Today, Persimmon Hill, Photo Life, Outdoor Photographer, Nature’s Best, Soura, America Photo and many others. His art has been collected and exhibited in galleries, cultural centers, and museums worldwide, and his work is included in the permanent collection of the International Photography Hall of Fame.
Yousef’s images and messages continue to seduce us, leaving us spell-bound and perpetually fascinated by the visible and invisible shadows, by the loud and quiet chaos, by the breathing and breathless light which insists that harmony exists, and that peace is an attainable possibility.