Index World Press Photo
February 2008 | Edition Nine     


For his gallery, Henri Ismail visited a place he called the Ten Cents Hotel in Jakarta – not a real hotel, but a room shared by up to fifty people in the Indonesian capital.

Henri, who took part in World Press Photo training at the Pañña Institute in Jakarta last year, says “photography is a medium in which I can express my view about social issues”.

The Ten Cents Hotel – so called because the accommodation, such as it is, costs the equivalent of ten US cents – is Henri’s long-term project.

Crammed into the room are workers from rural districts who have been attracted by the promise of the better-developed urban areas. The reality, though, is that they can only just scrape a living selling items on the street.

They often travel long distances to Jakarta, returning home after two weeks or so with some money for their families. Soon, they are back in the capital for another spell on the streets before another journey back to their villages.

“The 'hotel' is the basement of a house which has been modified, located along the Ciliwung River, the longest and the most polluted in Jakarta,” says 33-year-old Henri. “My aim is to highlight the poor living conditions, catch the public’s attention and then, hopefully, somebody will do something to improve the situation.”

After studying initially in the Netherlands, Henri returned to his native Jakarta in 2005 and now works there as a freelance. He used his Canon 30D with a Sigma 18-50mm lens, mostly in natural light but using flash in very low light.

Henri Ismail



Copyright © 2008, all rights reserved by the photographers