View allAll Photos Tagged Incheon
The scene of the crime. I could get into it and describe the barbarous nature of what's going on here, but let's just say that my jaw dropped as much as did that of the fish that was getting it's head carved off while it was trying to free itself.
Col. Hank Dodge, U.S. Army Garrison Red Cloud and Area I commander, led his military and civilian staff on an officer professional development tour to the site of Gen. Douglas MacArthur's bold Incheon Landing. The Incheon Landing on Sept. 15, 1950 is typically credited with turning the Korean War in favor of the Allied forces. Republic of Korea Army Col. (Ret.) Yu Sang-shik, who was an 11 years old Incheon resident during the Incheon Landing, talked to the staff about the historical significance of the landing and his impressions of it as a child.
Incheon, South Korea
This is a series I worked on when I was asked to photograph what I considered as 'home'. Moving almost every 2 to 3 years I have not yet established what I consider as my home and am very much confused about that subject. I chose airports to portray as my home because they are the in-between places of all the different places I've lived in. Its always interesting to see the various types of people that gather within one place with the same objective: to get somewhere.
Though many people are anxious, tired and stressed from the process of boarding and landing, it has become such a familiar process to me. I feel unusually comfortable in the rigid, unfriendly, mechanical vibe of airports -- to know that you're standing in a space that is completely man-made from top to bottom.