Signed exhibition and archival prints are available for purchase. Please send inquiry to rbrocamora@gmail.com

RICK ROCAMORA has won awards for his images and picture stories from Asian American Journalist Association, SF Bay Area Press Photographers Association, New California Media, Media Alliance; he was awarded a California Arts Council Art Fellowship and a Local Bay Area Heroes Award from KQED and Union Bank of California for his work about Filipino WW II Veterans. His work is widely exhibited in national and international museums and galleries. His work is part of a collection of American arts most recently exhibited at the Court of Saint James in the United Kingdom and the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo. His work is included in the traveling exhibition “Points of Entry-A Nation of Strangers,” which was exhibited at the Smithsonian, Center for Photographic Arts, Museum of Photographic Arts, and other venues. His images are part of “Pork and Perks - Corruption and Governance in the Philippines” a National Book Award winner in the Philippines in 1994. “Second-Class Veterans” a film produced by Don Young that profiled Rocamora’s undying efforts to document the day-to-day lives of Filipino veterans was broadcast on PBS stations in 2003 and 2004. His book about Filipino WWII veterans, "America's Second-Class Veterans" was published in 2009. He is also working on a project about Muslim-Americans after 9/11, Overseas Filipinos and Balikbayan Journal, a visual diary of his occasional visit to his motherland, the Philippines.

About Rick Rocamora

Rick Rocamora’s work belongs to the honorable tradition of documentary photography. In the 1930s, during the Depression, this photographic approach was used to change the ways we think about the world. Sponsored by the American government, such photographers as Walker Evans and Dorothea Lange worked with the Farm Security Administration photographing the rural communities in both the South and the West hit by drought and in poverty. Lange’s wonderful pictures of the brave people who sat in the sun waiting to pick peas in the Central Valley when there was no work where they came from helped Americans understand some of the problems of those times.

Like Lange, Rocamora focuses his attention on the people he wants us to look at and think about. These are ordinary people. They fought alongside American soldiers in World War II in the Pacific, often at great personal cost. They are Filipinos, living here in the United States, promised benefits by the United States government that many still expect. Most of these men are also very poor, though it is not their poverty that we remember most, but their gentleness and bravery. Rocamora reminds us, in these quiet and dignified pictures, of the value and integrity of these people, and of their strong sense of community-which sustains them, even as they suffer from careless neglect.

Sandra Phillips,
Senior Curator of Photography,
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Rick Rocamora has produced an important book of photographic images that addresses what can be called an inconvenient lapse of memory in the history of the United States of America. This book is about the group of men who were left behind after risking everything in defense of their country and ours. These men are the Filipino veterans who fought during World War II for the United States and were promised concrete enticements which in the end were as flimsy as sheets of paper left on the crest of a hill to the tender mercies of a fully developed March wind.

The book should be viewed as an important element in the failed promise of delivering the promise of America. Rocamora admirably performs this difficult task by photographing the lives of these men in a sensitive, straightorward, and respectable manner. He doesn’t add unnecessary flourishes that might take you away from their story. He leaves you to understand that these images are about these men and not about him. When you look into the eyes of these men, you will truly feel their pain. You will also feel the shame of knowing how they were left to drift by our country after helping us in our time of need. They went through hell and were then abandoned. Rick Rocamora has not abandoned these men and through his photographs of their lives, he insures that we will not forget them either.

Eli Reed,
Magnum Photos
University of Texas in Austin

The pictures—and the stories—in this book will break your heart. Rick Rocamora photographs Filipino soldiers who fought bravely during World War II and have come to America to demand the recognition due them. Rocamora portrays these men with tenderness and respect. In his pictures, their dignity is undiminished. They seem unbowed by the humiliations they had suffered in America, hopeful, despite all that they had been through here, that they will get the justice they deserve.

Sheila S. Coronel,
Director Stabile Center for Investigative Journalism,
Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University

20th December 2010

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Men at WORK

Men at WORK

17th December 2010

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Felix Peri

Felix Peri

15th December 2010

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After dinner, MIC sisters convent. Greenhills, San Juan, Metro Manila

After dinner, MIC sisters convent. Greenhills, San Juan, Metro Manila

11th December 2010

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Nature’s way to beautiful. Manila, Philippines

Nature’s way to beautiful. Manila, Philippines

5th December 2010

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Newspaper vendor. San Jose, Nueva Ecija, Philippines

Newspaper vendor. San Jose, Nueva Ecija, Philippines

1st December 2010

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Corner Paterno and Evangelista, Quiapo, Metro Manila

Corner Paterno and Evangelista, Quiapo, Metro Manila

16th November 2010

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Beijing, China 2010

Beijing, China 2010

16th November 2010

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Shanghai, China 2010

Shanghai, China 2010

16th November 2010

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China 2010

China 2010

16th November 2010

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Shanghai, China 2010

Shanghai, China 2010

4th November 2010

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Reaching for election ballers. Albay, Philippines

Reaching for election ballers. Albay, Philippines

4th November 2010

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Easter. Manila, Philippines 2010

Easter. Manila, Philippines 2010