gbo zangbe
te kpa'm te ko o gassa bi wo!
ki ma fara ha'm
sii dong zangbe
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Jean (Hal, Haldor,
Jon,) Noss
Ngaoundere, Cameroon 1972
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with orphans of
bushmeat trade
Meiganga, Cameroon
8th. grade
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Hal Noss:
global childhood + photo education
+ extensive experience
= powerful documentary
photography world-wide
I was born and raised as
an American citizen and a Gbaya village & bush kid in Cameroon,
an awsome country with 233 different languages. I grew up in the midst
of aid, conservation, development, eduction, health, linguistics, and
Christian ministry programs, under a friendly Islamic government. I
learned Gbaya and English as first languages, French in local primary
schools, and Pidgin-English on the streets of Nigeria. With life-long
experiences in multiple languages, cultures, religions, and socio-economic
goals, I also grew up explaining people to people.
My interest in photography
developed when I was 12 years old, after my father purchased an enlarger
from a departing Peace Corps volunteer and we figured out how to process
& print by pure trial and error. When someone in highschool discovered
that I could create photographs, I was given a camera and asked to shoot
for the yearbook. When they found out I could process and print, they
turned the school darkroom over to me. Between my assignments for the
yearbook I shot my first professional "paid" assignment, of
an elegant Nigerian birthday party; and my first documentary evidence
photos of a rogue wounded lion that charged me.
I
explored career opportunities while working as a local hire for the
United States Agency for International Development in Cameroon from
1985 to 1986.

Even
though aid, development, conservation, education, and ministry programs
have always been of primary importance, it became apparent that I might
do the most good for all, by improving communication and understanding
between the different, yet similar, peoples that I understood. I re-confirmed
my skills in the fine-arts, and selected photography as the most powerful
communication medium and global cross-cultural language that I could
use. I studied the feasibility of a photography career with "intro
to" and "documentary photography" classes, then moved
to Washington D.C. to continue my education.
I worked my way through the
Corcoran School of Art with jobs in local photography businesses, graduated
with a Bachelor of Fine Arts Photography degree (click
to view diploma) in 1991, and have been a working photographer ever
since. With ever-growing photo experience that now includes: audio,
video, text, teaching, management, and graphic design, the quality of
my images and the end products I deliver keep getting better. My original
goal: to build bridges between peoples using photography, has never
changed.
Clients
and credits include: the American Museum of Natural History, American
Zoo and Aquarium Association, Bushmeat Crisis Task Force, Minnesota
Department of Education, United Bible Societies, Walt Disney's Animal
Kingdom, World Relief, Wildlife Conservation Society, and many many
more.
Exhibitions
include: solo, group, & in absentia; local, traveling, national,
international, and permanent.
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