Carrying Life: WaterAid and Wimbledon Foundation announce London riverside photo exhibition by Laura El-Tantawy 

on
8 February 2023
Lustiya, 32, previously gave birth at Ntchisi District Hospital when it still had no water. At that time, her Guardian and mother-in-law, Agnes, spent three hours each morning fetching water for her.
Image: WaterAid/ Laura El-Tantawy

Malawi photo series highlights the emotional and physical burden on women giving birth in health centres with no access to clean water, decent toilets or good hygiene.

Download photosWaterAid and the Wimbledon Foundation have teamed up to launch Carrying Life: Motherhood and Water in Malawi, a striking outdoor multimedia exhibition by award-winning British-Egyptian photographer, Laura El-Tantawy, open to the public from 3 March to 14 April at More London near Tower Bridge. 

The 22-piece photo exhibition will be unveiled along the banks of the Thames, shining a light on the stories of mothers and babies in Malawi’s Ntchisi district who were previously impacted by dirty water, poor sanitation and a lack of hygiene in health centres. 

In the village of Chimwala, women fetch water by night to avoid the long queues at the pump during the day. This can be frightening, but with no other clean water source nearby, it is the only way they can provide for their families.
In the village of Chimwala, women fetch water by night to avoid the long queues at the pump during the day. This can be frightening, but with no other clean water source nearby, it is the only way they can provide for their families.
Image: WaterAid/ Laura El-Tantawy

Captured in El-Tantawy's distinctive and emotive style, these powerful photos highlight the hopes and fears of women waiting at their local ‘guardian shelter’ to give birth. Expectant mothers, and their family member or ‘guardian’, wait at these shelters in the hospital premises, before going into labour and moving to the wards. However, until WaterAid’s intervention, with support from the Wimbledon Foundation, many of these facilities lacked the clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene to give birth safely.

The collection of striking images and moving portraits will be displayed across lightboxes and digital screens, giving a unique glimpse into the lives of the women in their final stages of pregnancy, childbirth and the journey into motherhood and beyond. Through this new work, El-Tantawy not only offers an intimate insight into the lived experiences of mothers across the generations but also explores the extraordinary bond between women giving birth in such unsafe circumstances.  

Carrying Life is the first photo collaboration between international charity WaterAid and its partner, the Wimbledon Foundation, who have been supporting WaterAid’s work since 2017. Launched ahead of International Women’s Day, the exhibition aims to celebrate the dignity and strength of women in Ntchisi district, Malawi, whilst also drawing attention to the stark reality of giving birth without access to the basic essentials of clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene, leaving mothers and babies at risk of deadly infections. 

WaterAid has now provided these essentials in ten clinics in Ntchisi, four of which were provided with funding from the Wimbledon Foundation, official charity of the All England Lawn Tennis Club and The Championships, supporting the installation of taps and toilets. This means that women can now give birth free from the worry of infection caused by a lack of clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene.  

Enala Etifala, 19, lives near Kangolwa health centre and gave birth a year ago, before the centre had clean water.
Enala Etifala, 19, lives near Kangolwa health centre and gave birth a year ago, before the centre had clean water.
Image: WaterAid/ Laura El-Tantawy

Carrying Life: Motherhood and Water in Malawi is free to the public and will be open daily at Riverside, More London, from 3 March to 14 April 2023. 

ENDS

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Rosie Stewart, Senior Media Officer, [email protected] or Anna France-Williams, Senior Media Officer, [email protected].

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Notes to Editors:

WaterAid

WaterAid is working to make clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene normal for everyone, everywhere within a generation. The international not-for-profit organisation works in 28 countries to change the lives of the poorest and most marginalised people. Since 1981, WaterAid has reached 28 million people with clean water and nearly 29 million people with decent toilets.

For more information, visit our website wateraid.org/uk, follow us on Twitter @WaterAidUK, @WaterAid or @WaterAidPress, or find us on Facebook, LinkedIn or Instagram.

  • 771 million people in the world – one in ten – do not have clean water close to home.
  • Almost 1.7 billion people in the world – more than one in five – do not have a decent toilet of their own.
  • Over 300,000 children under five die every year from diarrhoeal diseases caused by poor water and sanitation. That's more than 800 children a day, or one child every two minutes.
  • Investing in safely managed water, sanitation and hygiene services provides up to 21 times more value than it costs.

[1] WHO/UNICEF (2021) Progress on household drinking water, sanitation and hygiene 2000-2020. Joint Monitoring Programme. Geneva: World Health Organisation.

[2] WHO/UNICEF (2021) Progress on household drinking water, sanitation and hygiene 2000-2020. Joint Monitoring Programme. Geneva: World Health Organisation.

[3] WaterAid calculations based on: Prüss-Ustün A, et al. (2019). Burden of Disease from Inadequate Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Selected Adverse Health Outcomes: An Updated Analysis with a Focus on Low- and Middle-Income Countries. International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health. vol 222, no 5, pp 765-777. AND The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (2020) Global Burden of Disease Study 2019. Seattle, WA: University of Washington.

[4] WaterAid. (2021) Mission-critical: Invest in water, sanitation and hygiene for a healthy and green economic recovery.

The Wimbledon Foundation 

The Wimbledon Foundation is the official charity of The All England Lawn Tennis Club and The Championships and has partnered with WaterAid since 2017. The Foundation’s current grant donates £1.2 million to WaterAid between 2020 and 2023 and supports WaterAid’s work in Malawi, Myanmar, Ethiopia and Madagascar. The Wimbledon Foundation has part-funded the Carrying Life exhibition and has also funded the water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) facilities and training at the healthcare facilities mentioned in the exhibition. 

Laura El-Tantawy

Laura El-Tantawy is a British/Egyptian documentary photographer, artful bookmaker and educator. She currently lives between London, UK and Cairo, Egypt. Growing up between East and West inspires her work, which contemplates notions of home & belonging, with a particular focus on social & environmental issues pertinent to her background. Her photography is recognised for its characteristically painterly & lyrical eye on reality. 

El-Tantawy is the recipient of various international awards and recognitions, including the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize, the W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund award for humanistic photography, Prix Virginia, PH Museum, the Royal Photographic Society’s 100 Photographic Heroines. Her work has been published in The New Yorker, Afar, Le Monde, Wall Street Journal, National Geographic, Time, New York Times, Huck & Foam among others. 

Since 2020, she has been an ambassador for Canon, collaborating with the global camera giant on initiatives across visual education and empowerment.