<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>With A Wah Do Dem, Boogie takes us with him into the underbelly of Kingston, Jamaica, a place where poverty, violence and crime a part of everyday life. Again, Boogie is on the margin of "normal" society that most of us call home.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Over the last decade, one of the guides through the street photography has been the seemingly fearless Vladimir Milivojevich, otherwise known as Boogie. Born and raised in Belgrade, in 1969, Boogie began photographing his war-torn country in the 1990's. His website (www.artcoup.com) says, "growing up in a war-torn country defined Boogie's style and attraction to the darker side of human existence." Since being granted United States residency in 1997 via the country's Diversity Immigrant Visa lottery program, Boogie has had six books published and shown the world rawness many are insulated from. Drugs, gangs, and guns may be what hit the observer of his work the hardest, but Boogie's work is more than shock value. Though it is hard to argue that a gun pointed towards the camera is hard to top, Boogie gives us more than that. More than collections of gut-punch images. His projects are an experience, a blend of documentary and street that put the viewer in the thick of it all, but with far less shakier footing than we likely would have. Boogie's latest book, 'A Wah Do Dem' (Drago, 2015) builds upon the photographer's rock-solid body of work with one notable exception. Unlike his previous projects, this is given to us in truly glorious color. With Kingston, Jamaica being the focus, color was undoubtedly the route to take. Testament to this comes with first viewing the cover, with two gangsters in horror masks, brandishing assault rifles in front of a green and purple wall. The tone is set from the get-go... tighten your laces and crack your neck, because this isn't going to be a sightseeing tour. Clearly, Boogie thrives in this environment. Leafing through A Wah Do Dem's 124, full-bleed pages it becomes clearer yet that Boogie the photographer needs to be there, or maybe even belongs there. A dangerous hybrid of documentary photographer and adrenaline junkie, Boogie takes the reader into the Kingston that the vast majority of us will never know and does so intensely. Because having the stones to document in this style wouldn't matter if Boogie wasn't a good photographer. And make no mistake, Boogie is a great photographer.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>A dangerous hybrid of documentary photographer and adrenaline junkie, Boogie takes the reader into the Kingston that the vast majority of us will never know and does so intensely.--Andrew Sweigart "StreetHunters Bookshelf: Boogie's 'A Wah Do Dem' "<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Boogie, the alias of Vladimir Milivojevich, was born in Serbia in 1969 and now based in Brooklyn, New York. Known as one of the most influential photographers of street culture in the new millennium, he deftly creates documentary and portrait photographs of people on the margins of society. His work has been featured in the New York Times, Time magazine, The Huffington Post, Huck magazine and HBO (for the show How To Make It In America). Boogie is a Street Photographer who is raw and has no fear of delving deep into intimate, confidential circles and taking photos that normally no one would shoot. He photographs the things we all know happen in the world but nobody really wants to see. His shots include situations where people do hard drugs, babies are neglected, gangs are conspiring, and guns are shown off; his mages could be considered by some as disturbing, by others as the harsh reality that has to be documented.
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