travel

2022 Year in review by Jessica Lee

Barbados in April

2022 was one heck of a year. I travelled to five new countries and in between daily news assignments, was lucky to go up north to remote communities in Manitoba twice for The Winnipeg Free Press. I read 25 books and they were mostly enjoyable. I also moved into a new apartment and worked on (and published) a few photo projects I’m proud of. I was fortunate to be given a handful of fantastic opportunities but I also made a lot happen for myself. I advocated for myself more this year and it worked.

Manitoba Keewatinowi Okmakanak Grand Chief Garrison Settee (second from right) and then Assembly of Manitoba Grand Chief Arlen Dumas (second from left) leave Cross Lake First Nation with their team. A house fire had taken the lives of three young children the night before and the chiefs were in the community to give their condolences.

In February, I was assigned to fly up north to Cross Lake First Nation, 520 km north of Winnipeg. It was one of the most difficult stories I would photograph for the year. A house fire had taken the lives of three young children and I was sent to document the aftermath. I don’t like that part of my job involves photographing human suffering but I am grateful for the trust I was given by the communities who welcomed me into their lives this year. I am honoured to have been able to witness so many important moments and given opportunities to try to convey the story or moment into photos.

The mother and father of the three children who passed away from a house fire in Cross Lake grieve during a ceremony to remember their children while the grandmother comforts them.

Manitoba Keewatinowi Okmakanak Grand Chief Garrison Settee (left) is photographed on the plane ride back from an emotionally exhausting day at Cross Lake First Nation, where the Chief is from. Three children perished in a house fire in the community.

Jennifer Hansen is photographed isolating at her home. She tested positive for COVID-19 after two years of avoiding it.

Mom Olena Hrushytska tears up at her son Sasha’s first day of school. The family arrived in Winnipeg in April after escaping the war in Ukraine. They’ve been busy rebuilding their lives. Hrushytska started two part-time jobs and Sasha started attending a local Ukrainian school.

Makaylah Gerard-Roussin’s family and family embrace during a day-long vigil at the ATV trail where the 20 year old’s body was found.

Residential school survivor Charlie Bittern poses for a photo in front of an archival image of a residential school class. In 1967, when he was 19, Bittern was forced by the principal of his school to run 80 km in a blizzard from Portage La Prairie to Brandon. “My lungs were burning, and my legs were going numb,” he says. Bittern has scars on his right calf, as a result of a station wagon driving into him when he dodged snow drifts.

Visual artist Bistyek poses for a photo in front of a wall of posters advertising his new show F—- War. As a child, he lived in Afrin, a Kurdish village in northern Syria, until war brought him to Winnipeg.

In the summer, I went on several road trips - to Mount Rushmore, North Dakota, Colorado, Nebraska and Wyoming; then to Saskatoon, Regina and Moose Jaw. Some places were new to me and were on the bucket list, but others were nostalgic trips. I found myself thinking about the person I was the last time I was there and how much had changed.

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly poses for a photo at the Human Rights Museum.

Max Kerman of The Arkells is photographed during a concert in Winnipeg.

Married couple Nancy Delgado and Yair Vanegas take part in Salsa Sundays in Winnipeg during the summer.

On a longer break, I travelled to Albania, Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina. I had been wanting to do this trip since before the pandemic and drove from Tirana along the coast until I reached Himare, making photographs along the way. I hadn’t travelled as much as I used to in 2020 and 2021 because of the pandemic and now that travel is possible again, I am making up for lost time.

Highway 73 in South Dakota

Tourists gaze up at Mount Rushmore.

Back in Winnipeg, I enjoyed the warm summer and quickly got back into the hum of newspaper life. Soon, I would begin two long-term projects I had pitched earlier in the year.

A road trip through Barbados in April.

A sunbather enjoys the waves at a beach off the Ionian Coast in Himare, Albania.

A rest stop in the Ceraunian Mountains, Albania.

In the fall, I flew to Pukatawagan to document a fly-in dentist who had been serving the community for the last 14 years. The area had unfortunately experienced a wildfire over the summer which led to their power lines being damaged. They were operating off of generators and as a result, frequent loss of electricity was a common occurrence. It was a challenge for me to document that story because of the elements I was working in, the long hours I spent photographing and also because I was a guest of a community that historically has been portrayed negatively in mainstream media, if they receive any coverage at all. I did not want to give them a reason to distrust future journalists.

Ruby feels her jaw after an intense round of tooth extraction in Pukatawagan, Manitoba, where I photographed dentist Wally Mah (left) on the job.

On assignment in Pukatawagan, Manitoba

I am incredibly grateful for all of the fun and interesting assignments that I’ve had this year and thankful to everyone I’ve photographed who has graciously brought their energy and given their time to me during our sessions.

A boy in Pukatawagan, Manitoba

Now that we’re at the end of the year, I find myself reflecting on the kind of work I want to be spending time on in the new year. I’m also thinking about the places I want to explore. I travelled to my 71st (UN recognized) country this year and while I realize I have come far, I also know there are many places I have yet to travel to, and many I would like to go back to.

Kotor, Montenegro

Congrats to everyone who made it to the end of this year and thank you for joining me on this journey whether you are a colleague, editor or someone I’ve photographed. These past few pandemic years have not been easy. Hopefully in a few years’ time, we can look back and maybe smile at it all because we survived. See you in 2023!

Swimming with sharks somewhere off of Nassau, Bahamas

2020 Year in review by Jessica Lee

Amsterdam on March 14, two days before everything shut down. The girl in this photo had no idea about the next nine months ahead of her.

Amsterdam on March 14, two days before everything shut down. The girl in this photo had no idea about the next nine months ahead of her.

2020 was a heart-breaking, frustrating and all-around strange year for everyone. I made the best I could out of it. It was all I could do while sheltered at home in Toronto. I continued making photos, writing and saying what I felt needed to be said. I know being able to stay home is a privilege and I am grateful to our frontline workers who sacrificed so much these past few months.

I’m not going to count my losses from this year but to be honest, maybe I needed this pandemic to focus myself in my art and practice. In years past, I likely would have been on a trip somewhere when photo editors called (this has happened twice that I know of, but who knows how many other times I lost photo work because I was out of the country...). It took a global pandemic to ground me to one spot, but it was probably very helpful to both photo editors and to me, to actually physically be in the place they expected me to be in when they commissioned an assignment.

My photo of Hannah Wei (bottom left), a COVID-19 survivor, commissioned by Bloomberg Businessweek.

My photo of Hannah Wei (bottom left), a COVID-19 survivor, commissioned by Bloomberg Businessweek.

This year, I’m grateful I got to tell stories about alternative housing, precarious living conditions, lifestyle and travel through my van life series in Toronto Life Magazine. As a millennial who graduated from school into a housing bubble in Toronto, this idea of thriving under difficult and different conditions that previous generations didn’t have has been on my mind for a while now. I am thankful to my editors and all of the individuals who shared their lives with me so that we could (in our unique way) add to the dialogue about housing affordability, alternative lifestyles and the increasing cost of living relative to stagnant wages in Ontario.

Max Schneider, 26, resting during a break at his courier job in Toronto. Max, originally from Germany, arrived in Canada in the spring of 2018. He bought a used van to sleep in and save money on accommodations.

Max Schneider, 26, resting during a break at his courier job in Toronto. Max, originally from Germany, arrived in Canada in the spring of 2018. He bought a used van to sleep in and save money on accommodations.

Logan Barbosa, 21 and David Snow, 25, live in a converted van home in Caledon, Ontario. Logan says the property market in Southern Ontario is out of reach for people her age.

Logan Barbosa, 21 and David Snow, 25, live in a converted van home in Caledon, Ontario. Logan says the property market in Southern Ontario is out of reach for people her age.

Jamieson Lamb, 37, lives in a van in Barrie year round while working two part-time jobs to be able to afford grad school without going into debt.

Jamieson Lamb, 37, lives in a van in Barrie year round while working two part-time jobs to be able to afford grad school without going into debt.

Crystal Drinkwalter, 25 (right) and Jazmyn Canning, 26, travel full-time in their converted Mercedes Sprinter van.

Crystal Drinkwalter, 25 (right) and Jazmyn Canning, 26, travel full-time in their converted Mercedes Sprinter van.

This summer, I also photographed many social justice protests. I feel like I’ve aged years through these past nine months. I’ve now photographed enough arrests to know how a police officer will approach a person to arrest them. Those movies where the person who is about to be arrested has an entire two minutes before being handcuffed to give a speech about they how will get their revenge from jail? I know now that is totally fake. In real life, that would never happen. In real life, arrests are quick and swift.

Police form a human barricade to prevent protestors from entering the building Toronto Mayor John Tory resides in on July 6. The protestors were asking for the mayor to reinstate an eviction moratorium that would be lifted in August as the emergency…

Police form a human barricade to prevent protestors from entering the building Toronto Mayor John Tory resides in on July 6. The protestors were asking for the mayor to reinstate an eviction moratorium that would be lifted in August as the emergency order in Ontario ended.

As the pandemic played out, I also watched with sadness and frustration as more and more reports of harassment towards people of Chinese and Asian backgrounds happened. Despite living in Canada, a country seen internationally as multicultural and accepting, the reality is xenophobia is still prevalent out there. I am grateful to the editors at Maclean’s Magazine who provided me space to publish a piece about how racism has affected the lives of several Chinese Canadians.

Inthida Ngeth, 40, and her two daughters Emily, 11, and Audrey, 8. As the coronavirus spread across the country, Ngeth, who volunteers at North American Association of Asian Professionals, wondered about how she would explain how to handle covid-rel…

Inthida Ngeth, 40, and her two daughters Emily, 11, and Audrey, 8. As the coronavirus spread across the country, Ngeth, who volunteers at North American Association of Asian Professionals, wondered about how she would explain how to handle covid-related racism to her to young daughters.

Andre Goh, 57, has encountered racism almost his entire life since moving to Toronto as a teenager. “The experience of being ‘othered’ has been with me a long time. I’m always wondering if I’m good enough. There’s even a point in my life I convinced…

Andre Goh, 57, has encountered racism almost his entire life since moving to Toronto as a teenager. “The experience of being ‘othered’ has been with me a long time. I’m always wondering if I’m good enough. There’s even a point in my life I convinced myself I was white. It was easier,” he says.

I also made time to relax in the summer and covered ‘softer’ pieces like how a drag queen shifted her business outdoors during the pandemic because nightclubs and bars were closed and how people were trying to get outdoors after being cooped up inside all spring.

Sofonda Cox has been performing as a drag queen in Toronto for over 20 years. Before the pandemic, she was very busy with regular shows and hosting gigs. With bars and restaurants closed, she has had to find new ways to make money including performi…

Sofonda Cox has been performing as a drag queen in Toronto for over 20 years. Before the pandemic, she was very busy with regular shows and hosting gigs. With bars and restaurants closed, she has had to find new ways to make money including performing a ‘curbside drag show’.

My friend Brian bought a sailboat during the summer months of the pandemic to get outdoors. I photographed and wrote about him in Toronto Life Magazine.

My friend Brian bought a sailboat during the summer months of the pandemic to get outdoors. I photographed and wrote about him in Toronto Life Magazine.

I also made a few portraits I am really proud of.

My friend Alix, originally from France.

My friend Alix, originally from France.

Nazima Qureshi, a registered dietician, sits in her garden. Commissioned by the Globe and Mail for a piece about nutrition and food.

Nazima Qureshi, a registered dietician, sits in her garden. Commissioned by the Globe and Mail for a piece about nutrition and food.

Author Robyn Maynard for Winnipeg Free Press.

Author Robyn Maynard for Winnipeg Free Press.

My friend George was a working model in the 70’s and 80’s. He has since retired but does occasional shoots for fun.

My friend George was a working model in the 70’s and 80’s. He has since retired but does occasional shoots for fun.

And like many people under lockdown, I levelled up in my cooking skills at home and also watched many movies I normally would not have time to watch and rewatched a few favourites. I read 20 books in total.

Here are the movies I enjoyed this year (I didn’t include movies I didn’t enjoy on this list):

Sophie’s Choice
Batman trilogy
Tootsie
The Firm
Rosemary’s Baby
Manhattan Murder Mystery
Marvel movies (I tried to watch them in order)
Funny Girl
King Kong (2005)
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
Primal Fear
From Dusk till Dawn
The Lobster
Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald
Django Unchained
Reservoir Dogs
Internal Affairs
Public Enemies
What’s Eating Gilbert Grape
The Basketball Diaries
Mordecai
Moon
The Gentlemen
Along Came a Spider
A Beautiful Day in the Neighbourhood
Clue
Jumanji (1995)
American Gigolo
The Jackal
The Score

Here are the books I enjoyed this year (I didn’t include books I didn’t enjoy on this list):

Madame Bovary - Gustave Flaubert
The Hate U Give - Angie Thomas
Gone Girl - Gillian Flynn
The Road - Cormac McCarthy
The Year of Magical Thinking - Joan Didion
Educated - Tara Westover
The Psychopath Test - Jon Ronson
Crazy Rich Asians - Kevin Kwan
Chop Suey Nation - Ann Hui
Never Let Me Go - Kazuo Ishiguro
Open Book - Jessica Simpson
Nickel and Dimed - Barbara Ehrenreich
Moneyball - Michael Lewis
Meditations - Marcus Aurelius
This is Cuba - David Ariosto
Pachinko - Min Jin Lee
Daily Rituals - Mason Currey

Though I didn’t get to go many places this year, I am still grateful for the many photo projects I was able to work on, the new people I was able to meet socially-distanced and for all of the great literature and media I was inspired by. I am hoping 2021 brings more normalcy, more photo projects and more travel. Right now I don’t have any plans because it’s hard to plan during a pandemic, but I do have an idea of where I’d like to go. For now, I am just grateful to have survived this strange year… and if you’re reading this, you did too. Congrats. See you in 2021!