
© Lana Slezic
In nine days, Lana Slezic will give birth to her first child. But while most expectant mothers are taking the last days of gestation to rest and nest, this photojournalist is doing anything but. Instead, Slezic is in her native Toronto, organizing prints, submitting proposals to exhibitions (one to the Canadian High Commission in London and one to the Peer gallery in New York) and tying up loose ends for her move to New Delhi, which will happen five weeks after her son is born. Before flying back to Toronto, so she could give birth in her hometown, Slezic was based in Istanbul, shooting independently and taking assignments from Panos Picture Agency, which represents her.
For Slezic, this international travel schedule has become the norm. During the past four years, her curiosity for different cultures has spurred her to shoot life in war-torn Croatia, the tense military presence in Jerusalem, 21st-century Canadian Mennonites and, most notably, the lives of Afghan women in the years after the fall of the Taliban.
Her images—beautiful glimpses into sometimes harsh worlds—have found their way to the pages of The Guardian, The New York Times, Time and British Vogue, among other publications. Given her much-praised 2007 photo book Forsaken, Slezic’s work is a natural fit for shows like Fovea Exhibition’s “Dispatches from the Frontlines: 12 Women Photojournalists.”
“Lana’s is just a very fresh and new story to tell,” says Stephanie Heimann, director of the nonprofit Fovea in Beacon, New York. “We thought women’s rights [in Afghanistan] are still a frontline issue. We love Lana’s visual style and the lyrical narrative in her imagery. It’s beautiful, and people are very affected by her work.”
Moving in a New Direction
While Slezic’s portfolio has ensured her the confidence to go to the ends of the earth and produce salable images, ironically it was the study of movement that led to her career in still pictures.
Born in Toronto, Canada, Slezic’s love of athletics nudged her to major in kinesiology, the science of human movement, at the University of Western Ontario. But it didn’t stick. “When I graduated [in 1996], I knew that I didn’t want to do anything with this degree,” she explains. “So I traveled through Asia for six months. Before I left, my dad [an amateur photographer] gave me a manual Pentax and a couple rolls of film. I just found myself shooting everything and buying film constantly. I didn’t want to do anything else. It was like falling in love.”
From an Internet café in India, Slezic began researching photography programs. As soon as she returned to Canada, she enrolled at Loyalist College in Belleville, Ontario, to study photojournalism.
“Because I had just finished a four-year degree, I was looking for a program where I could delve into an intense course and get into the workforce,” says Slezic, who finished the program in a year. “I didn’t know much about the photographic industry,” she says. “But I knew you could work in newspapers. I didn’t want to do advertising, commercial or art photography; I wanted to document stories and people in their natural environments.”
Immediately out of school, Slezic got an internship at The Globe and Mail (Canada’s national newspaper) and went on to work at the Toronto Star. When her contract ended, Slezic didn’t push to stay.
“It was a fantastic training ground, but it wasn’t gratifying on a deeper level,” she says of her two years at newspapers. “I would get three or four assignments in a day, spending a half hour at each one, but I wasn’t storytelling. I was 25 or 26, and there was so much to do and see. I couldn’t see myself working there for the rest of my life. It wasn’t enough.”




















