PROJECT LAUNCH: Juror's Statement

JUROR MAURO BEDONI, Photo Editor, COLORS magazine

The Project Launch grant submissions included many different kinds of art and documentary projects, mainly journalistic reportage, landscapes, portraits, fine art, architecture and still-life dealing with social, political, environmental and global issues, but also local and private moments. They were shot in many countries, although most in the US, and through different perspectives. But only a few projects advanced to my shortlist.

I judged the strength of the imagery first, but I also cared how the artist's statement described and supported the project with words that images could not speak. In the final round, I elevated little-covered contemporary topics, excellently executed and formally consistent.

I appreciate that this grant selection process gives feedback to the photographers by letting them know how far they advanced in the rounds. For those who did not make the final selection, I invite you to carefully review the winning projects along with the juror's statements to provide insights and guidance for your process of self-critique.

Every award has a specific purpose. The purpose of this one is to support the pursuit of a project and to give a project exposure and dissemination. I kept this premise in mind while making selections, encouraging promising talent and the photographers who chose topics that need to be explored more deeply, and who did so in experimental, intriguing and meaningful ways. At the end of the day, this is the challenge that contemporary photography has to meet in order to engage an audience.

JUROR VERNA CURTIS Curator of Photography, The Library of Congress

With the daunting task of scrolling through and digesting 12,000 images submitted by 601 entrants, I turned to the photographers' statements before looking at their slides. The result was that I was evaluating how well their intentions visually communicated to me. I was asking: how relevant or vital was the idea they intended to put across; did I understand from the images what they were trying to say; and were those images compelling to look at? The entries ranged across the spectrum of what photographs can communicate from the documentation of human or economic struggle to disappearing cultures or lost ones. There were personal explorations -- of one's identity, of situations, of positions one can find oneself in, and of life's ambiguities. Others took on the challenge to evoke memory or to have us question what is real. While there were many worthy projects on key contemporary subjects, which gave them credence, those which focused in equal measure on their subject and its most effective presentation won my votes.

I found myself drawn to the photographers who took on the greatest challenges, who observed with the most critical eye, who were able to touch in me an emotional chord, and who sought strength and found compassion. I would like to encourage many who submitted their work for their commitment and their sincerity. While tough to give so few photographers CENTER's recognition in the Project Launch grant, it was a pleasure to join all of them in the adventure.

PROJECT LAUNCH: Juror's Statement

JUROR CHRISTOPHER MCCALL, Director, Pier 24 Photography

At the beginning of this process, the pool of submissions reached just about 600, with portfolios from almost every corner of the world. I was both intrigued and challenged by the task of reviewing so much work exclusively in a digital format, the first year this jurying process has functioned in this manner. As I scrolled between various applicants, it quickly became clear which work I responded to most strongly. These projects not only combined clear, technical savvy, but were also informed by a distinct and fully developed concept, where aesthetics and meaning coalesced. While they may have reconsidered familiar subjects or terrain, the approach taken was so completely different that what could have been staid and unremarkable was instead rendered fresh and innovative. It was those portfolios that were advancing the medium in some clear and exciting way. Thoughtful editing, engaging sequencing and installation shots to complete the vision often set these submissions apart as well. While I did consider the artists’ statements in this process, it was the photographs that ultimately guided my final decision.

This year’s grant recipient, David Favrod, best embodied the attributes outlined above. While issues of identity have a long history within the medium of photography, the staging of the photographs in Gaijin and Favrod’s deliberate integration of Japanese traditions and symbols resulted in a compelling narrative. This story, however, remains open-ended, allowing almost any viewer a point of entry. His presentation and decisions regarding scale, layering and sequencing demonstrated a clear vision that considered and advanced the lineage within which he was working.

I selected Laia Abril and her project Thinspiration for my Juror’s Choice. Abril tackles a challenging subject that is often overlooked in contemporary culture through an unexpected and potent gaze. Although the topic has been explored by her photographic predecessors, Abril’s use of the computer monitor – with its banding, smudges and stains across the screen – render her subjects through a lens inherent to the technology and social media prevalent in society today. The photographs are challenging and haunting, staying with you beyond your initial viewing.

I am grateful for the opportunity to have worked with CENTER on this project, an organization I have followed and admired for many years.

JURORS:

Mauro Bedoni
Photo Editor, COLORS magazine

Juror Statement

Verna Curtis
Curator of Photography, The Library of Congress

Juror Statement

Chris McCall
Director, Pier 24 Photography

Juror Statement

Winner:

David Favrod

Jurors' Choice:

  • Christian Vium

    chosen by Mauro Bedoni

  • PROJECT LAUNCH: Juror's Statement

    JUROR CHRISTOPHER MCCALL, Director, Pier 24 Photography

    At the beginning of this process, the pool of submissions reached just about 600, with portfolios from almost every corner of the world. I was both intrigued and challenged by the task of reviewing so much work exclusively in a digital format, the first year this jurying process has functioned in this manner. As I scrolled between various applicants, it quickly became clear which work I responded to most strongly. These projects not only combined clear, technical savvy, but were also informed by a distinct and fully developed concept, where aesthetics and meaning coalesced. While they may have reconsidered familiar subjects or terrain, the approach taken was so completely different that what could have been staid and unremarkable was instead rendered fresh and innovative. It was those portfolios that were advancing the medium in some clear and exciting way. Thoughtful editing, engaging sequencing and installation shots to complete the vision often set these submissions apart as well. While I did consider the artists’ statements in this process, it was the photographs that ultimately guided my final decision.

    This year’s grant recipient, David Favrod, best embodied the attributes outlined above. While issues of identity have a long history within the medium of photography, the staging of the photographs in Gaijin and Favrod’s deliberate integration of Japanese traditions and symbols resulted in a compelling narrative. This story, however, remains open-ended, allowing almost any viewer a point of entry. His presentation and decisions regarding scale, layering and sequencing demonstrated a clear vision that considered and advanced the lineage within which he was working.

    I selected Laia Abril and her project Thinspiration for my Juror’s Choice. Abril tackles a challenging subject that is often overlooked in contemporary culture through an unexpected and potent gaze. Although the topic has been explored by her photographic predecessors, Abril’s use of the computer monitor – with its banding, smudges and stains across the screen – render her subjects through a lens inherent to the technology and social media prevalent in society today. The photographs are challenging and haunting, staying with you beyond your initial viewing.

    I am grateful for the opportunity to have worked with CENTER on this project, an organization I have followed and admired for many years.

 

Juror's Choice: Christian Vium

Artist Statement: NOMAD_SCAPES

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Engaging with the porous interstitial ’spaces’ which emerge at the intersection between nomadic and sedentary worlds, or desert and urban worlds, NOMAD_SCAPES maps a particular form of emergent potentiality emanating from these liminal landscapes. Using an analogue medium-format camera, a notebook and a handheld GPS, I have systematically mapped the city of Nouakchott during extended ethnographic fieldwork in the period 2010- 2012, aiming to provide a nomadic reading of urban ephemerality in a largely undocumented and unique setting : a city which was constructed ex-nihilo in 1957 and now harbours a million inhabitants, the vast majority of whom have partaken in nomadic livelihoods now shattered by recurring droughts. The project NOMAD_SCAPES chronicles the conflation of ’smooth’ and ’striated’ space, thus collapsing the rigid dichotomy between the nomadic war machine and the State apparatus, to paraphrase Deleuze & Guattari (Mille Plateaux 1980).

Each of the 2000+ medium-format negatives in the archive is accompanied by GPS registrated coordination, constituting a comprehensive mapping of this mutating metropole. From the initial archive of images, approximately 200 will be selected and reproduced in the year 2020, out of which approximately 50 of these will constitute the final double edition; an iconic spatio-temporal blueprint of Nouakchott 2010/2020. The reference years 2010 and 2020 arise directly from Nouakchott’s official urban renewal master plan, which aims at significantly re-ordering the urban landscape between these two decades. The project bears witness to this endeavour.