Ruddy Roye


Radcliffe Roye, known professionally as Ruddy Roye is a Jamaican documentary photographer specializing in editorial and environmental portraits, and photojournalism based in Brooklyn. Roye is a part of the Kamoinge black photographers collective and was featured in recent documentary a feature film on Black Photographers and photography in America. Ruddy Roye was listed as one of The 50 Greatest Street Photographers Right Now by Complex in 2017.

Early life and education

Roye was born in Montego Bay, Jamaica in 1969. At an early age, Roye's mother, Dorcas Leonie Roye encouraged him to read and participate in speech, drama, and music. At Herbert Morrison Technical High, he participated in band under Snick Glenn and enjoyed his time as a musician. In an interview, Roye stated that if he has not become a photographer, he "would be a writer, a musician, or a professor in that order." He immigrated to the United States in 1990. In 1998, Ruddy graduated from Goucher College with a bachelor's in English literature where he studied writing and the visual arts.

Career

Ruddy has worked with publications like The New York Times, Fast Company and BET, Ebony, ESPN Magazine, and Essence and has also worked with local newspapers like New York Newsday. Ruddy honed his skill as a photojournalist by working as an Associated Press stringer in New York covering journalism events. He is also known for his documentation of the dancehall scene all over the world. He has traveled to as far as Brazzaville in the Congo to document how Jamaicans and other dancers use the language of dance as a tool of activism.
Recently, Ruddy began experimenting with interpretative photography, preferring to allow the abstract content within the frame to dictate the voice and purpose of the image. His 'Elements' series focuses on "pictorialism," and the blurry picture is said to be his way of transmitting graphic and emotionally raw imagery.
Ruddy has been instrumental in leading the Instagram charge as a photographer showcasing his interest in his community of Bed-Stuy and Brooklyn as a whole. The images he portrays in his 'Black Portraiture' or 'I Can't Breathe' series have been the talking point of numerous forums on Instagram. He was asked to take over the New Yorker Instagram feed when Hurricane Sandy ravaged the eastern shores in October 2012. Ruddy has taught at New York University, the School of Visual Arts, and Columbia University engaging in conversations with photography students on the rise of Instagram and the changing face of photojournalism. Some of is work has been noted as seeking to change law enforcement's failure to recognize the humanity of Black men.
Ruddy was the TIME's Pick for Instagram Photographer of 2016.

Exhibitions