November • 2023
Always a joy to work with Carey - clients and subjects are consistently pleased.
New York, NY, USA
9 reviews$600 - $2000 / Day
Request QuoteCarey is a photojournalist and cinematographer based in Brooklyn, NY. After ten action-packed years as a staff photographer at the Sun Sentinel, Fresno Bee, Desert Sun and Auburn Journal, she went independent in 2011 to pursue work about women around the world. She has told stories about gender-based violence in Papua New Guinea, child marriage in Nepal, sex trafficking in Seattle, meth addiction and childbirth in California, street harassment in New York and domestic violence in Florida. Carey has lived and photographed extensively throughout the Caribbean, Latin America, and Asia Pacific. Her clients have included CARE, The New York Times, NBC News, Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, and Sports Illustrated. She is also a Nikon School Instructor as well as a storytelling mentor and coach. Carey reported from Papua New Guinea as an IRP Health Fellow in 2012. She holds a B.A. in Cognitive Science and minor in Spanish from University of California, Berkeley.
November • 2023
Always a joy to work with Carey - clients and subjects are consistently pleased.
May • 2021
Carey is awesome - professional, talented, personable
March • 2022
awesome to work with Carey, as always.
In the South Pacific island nation of Papua New Guinea, one of the world’s most violent places, nearly every woman has experienced some form of domestic abuse.
Once child refugees themselves, recipients of the world’s first CARE Packages pay it forward 70 years later, sending compassion — and so much more — to Syrian refugee children.
Providing more than just a refuge from stress, one woman runs a resort in the conservative Muslim region of Aceh. She employs a gay man, single moms, serves alcohol and encourages women to let their hair down from under their hijab. She is still Muslim, but provides relief from Shariah Law despite some push-back.
This multimedia report details the forces pushing boys into early marriages in the farming villages of western Nepal.
As New York City became the epicenter of coronavirus in the U.S., the number of deaths overwhelmed the city's deathcare system. A look at those caring for our dead.
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