Your Bio

Thomas L.Kelly was born in Santa Fe and educated at Loyola University of Chicago and in Rome. He first traveled to Nepal in 1978 as a Peace Corps volunteer. Since then, he has worked as a photo-activist, documenting disappearing cultural traditions and the struggles of marginalized people worldwide. His home is in Kathmandu. Since the early 1990s, he has been recording the lives of sex workers and traditions surrounding prostitution across South Asia. Thomas has worked extensively for UNICEF and Save the Children Fund (USA) on the subjects of child prostitution and trafficking, among others. His work has appeared in several international publications, including the New York Times, Time, Newsweek, Smithsonian, Archeology, U.K., The Observer, Le Figaro and Stern. He was awarded the Best Travel Photograph by Conde Nast and Photographer of the Year by Hinduism Today. He has received several grants, including one from the Gates Foundation and the Threshold Grant. With these grants, Kelly has used the camera as a tool to comment on social policy. He has also worked on social issues relating to gender empowerment and HIV/AIDS . In addition, Kelly has taught community workshops fostering youth empowerment. In the workshops, he encourages young people to tell their own visual songs, using their own voices.

Apart from photography, Kelly has produced and directed films and videos for Discovery Communications, USA, National Geographic and the BBC. These films and videos address a number of issues, including prostitution, violence against women and esoteric ethnic practices. He is currently the AV Technical Advisor for The Youth Expression Project (YEP). YEP is a program which helps young people identify and voice their concerns about parental, sexual, and societal issues through written, photographic and video mediums. Their media outputs will be directed to parents, teachers and the general public through A YEP traveling exhibit.

URL: http://www.thomaslkellyphotos.com
http://www.wildearthjourneys.com
http://www.wildearthnepal.com
http://www.photokunst.com


E-mail address: tkelly@photo.wlink.com.np
Tele# 977-9851026738, 977-01-4438883,
P.O.Box 1406
Kathmandu, Nepal

Featured Galleries

Separating Myth from Reality : International Art Festival:
Separating Myth from Reality Status of Women

October 30 - November 10, 2009

Artist(s): Artists from 25 countries
Dated: 2009-10-30 -To- 2009-11-10

Venues:

    * Nepal Art Council, Babar Mahal (Thomas L. Kelly)
    * Siddhartha Art Gallery, Baber Mahal Revisited  
    * Kathmandu Contemporary Art Centre, Jhamsikhel
    * Patan Museum, Patan Durbar Square
    * Nepal Association for Fine Arts (NAFA), Naxal
    * Imago Dei Cage Gallery, Gairidhara

Separating Myth from Reality

International Art Festival: Separating Myth from Reality Status of Wom ...

Updated: Oct 15, 2009 1:10am PST

Bhutanese Refugee : In the early 1990s tens of thousands of ethnic Nepalis were arbitrarily deprived of their Bhutanese citizenship. Some were then expelled from Bhutan, while others fled the country to escape from a campaign of arbitrary arrest and detention directed against the ethnic Nepalis. For sixteen years these Bhutanese refugees have languished in seven refugee camps in Nepal with no resolution to their plight. In October 2006, however, the United States announced its willingness to resettle up to 60,000 of the refugees. While the U.S. resettlement offer has given hope to many of the Nepali-speaking refugees, now numbering some 106,000, the lack of clear information about the resettlement offer or about the prospects for other durable solutions, namely repatriation to Bhutan or local integration in Nepal, has resulted in increasing anxiety and tensions among the refugees. Some opponents of resettlement have threatened refugees who speak out in favor of resettlement, leaving many refugees fearful of expressing their thoughts on their future. 

Resettlement countries – US, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway and Denmark.

IOM resettlement projects in Nepal began in October 2007. All projects are estimated to continue until the end of 2012. The current annual budget for all resettlement projects is USD 12 million. Most resettlement activities take place at the IOM office in Damak, a small town in eastern Nepal in close proximity to the seven Bhutanese refugee camps; the IOM office in Kathmandu is the base of most diplomatic and administrative activities. All resettlement projects are now at full capacity. Currently, 1,500 refugees depart for resettlement on a monthly basis, and it is projected that this level of activity will continue for the next three years.

Bhutanese Refugee Camp-Beldangi-II, Jhapa, Nepal.

Bhutanese Refugee

In the early 1990s tens of thousands of ethnic Nepalis were arbitraril ...

Updated: Nov 03, 2009 10:27pm PST

Gallery Categories

Events

3 galleries with 52 photos

Updated: Jan 01, 2009 11:41pm PST

Books Published

8 galleries with 739 photos

Updated: Oct 06, 2009 9:30pm PST

Journalism

5 galleries with 239 photos

Updated: Jan 08, 2009 9:57pm PST

Recent Projects

4 galleries with 65 photos

Updated: Feb 13, 2009 1:32am PST