Digital Assets

Tuareg Nomad — Saharan Camp Fire Portrait

699.00 د.إ

A Tuareg man at his camp in the Algerian Sahara — the indigo tagelmust veil wrapped to reveal only his eyes, firelight illuminating his face from below, the dark desert behind, the encampment’s camel visible at the frame edge.

Description

The Tuareg of the central Sahara — a Berber people whose traditional territories span Algeria, Niger, Mali, Libya, and Burkina Faso — maintain a distinctive dress culture in which men cover the face with the tagelmust cloth, an indigo-dyed veil whose blue dye was historically absorbed by the skin to a faint blue tint (hence the historical reference to the ‘blue men of the desert’). This portrait was made at a nomadic family encampment in the Tamanrasset region of Algeria during a research expedition, with the family patriarch’s agreement. The evening camp fire provides the portrait’s sole light source: the fire burns to the right of the frame, illuminating the man’s eyes above the tagelmust with warm orange light while the blue-black of his veil and the darkness of the desert behind require no further description. Shot at f/2 on a 50mm prime at ISO 6400.

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