Sara Abbaspour claims the 1st prize of the PHmuseum 2024 Photographers Grant with her project Floating Ocean. The New Generation Prize was awarded to Sara Faustino for A Home With No Roof.
A independent jury comprised of Danaé Panchaud (Curator, Museologist, Lecturer and
Director Centre de la photographie Genève), Farah Al Qasimi (Visual Artist), Gem
Fletcher (Writer, Host of The Messy Truth podcast) and Pixy Liao (Visual Artist) has
assigned the €5,000 PhMuseum 2024 Women Photographers Grant Main Prize to
Iranian photographer Sara Abbaspour for her project Floating Ocean. Judge Gem
Fletcher motivates the choice on behalf of the jury:
“Sara Abbaspour’s Floating Ocean charts a transitional moment in Iran’s socio-political
landscape told through the relationship between spaces and their inhabitants. Making
poetry out of collisions—temporal and eternal, interior and exterior, familiar and
peculiar, personal and political, seen and unseen, magic and mundane, imagined and
experienced—Abbaspour conjures a complex and moving contemporary portrait of a
society in an era of profound social transformation. Leveraging a collection of narrative
threads, Abbaspour's potent body of work reminds us to continually renew our
perspectives, not only as a way of imagining but as a means of survival.”
Floating Ocean © Sara Abbaspour
Floating Ocean © Sara Abbaspour
The €2,000 second prize was claimed by American photographer
Lisa Elmaleh, who
presented the project Tierra Prometida / Promised Land. Judge Farah Al Qasimi
elaborates on the jury's choice:
“Lisa Elmaleh's Tierra Prometida offers an attentive journey along the U.S. - Mexico
border. The region has long been a symbol of American exclusionary politics and
border violence, but Elmaleh's 8x10 view camera approach slows down the process of
witnessing and invites us into humanizing moments with the many people whose
livelihoods are defined by the wall's presence. While technically beautiful, the
photographs also feel timeless, which works to highlight the ongoing urgency of the
border crisis in America and beyond. I believe that this work straddles traditional
reportage with narrative storytelling in a way that is both informative and emotionally
striking.”
Tierra Prometida / Promised Land © Lisa Elmaleh
Tierra Prometida / Promised Land © Lisa Elmaleh
With her work Padre, Bolivian photographer
Marisol Mendez was granted the third prize
of €1,000. Danaé Panchaud comments on her work:
Skilfully weaving personal family history over three generations with the broader social
context of Latin America, Marisol Mendez's ongoing project Padre is a delicate and
thoughtful exploration of contemporary masculinity. Taking as its starting point letters
from her grandfather to his sons, including her father, she sets out to examine and
deconstruct how notions of masculinity are embedded in, and imposed on, individual,
familial and collective identities. Using hunting, a gesture of dominance, control and
strength as her framework, Mendez produces a nuanced narrative, imbued with a
determined softness countering its expected violence.
The Main Prize Honourable Mentions were assigned to L'Amour Amor by Lisa
Gervassi, My Favorite Shapes by Robin Crookall, Everything Is Uncomfortable When
The Earth Shakes by Joana Dionísio, Flowers Drink The River by Pia Guilmoth, After A
Denied Abortion by Stacy Kranitz, and Helmersstraat by Marens Van Leunen.
Honourable Mention - L'Amour Amor - © Lisa Gervassi
The €2,000 New Generation Prize was assigned to Swiss photographer Sara Faustino
who presented the project A Home With No Roof, here commented by judge Pixy Liao:
“Sara Faustino's project A Home With No Roof brilliantly uses a 1:15 scale model of a
house to explore the dysfunctionality within her home. By immersing herself in this
miniature world—incorporating scaled-down everyday objects, sculptures of body
parts, and striking juxtapositions of size—she transforms the apartment into a
monstrous entity while positioning herself as both subject and object within the space.
Her imagery vividly conveys a sense of discomfort and awkwardness, evoking the
emotional experiences of her younger self. Through this process, Sara not only invites
the audience to empathize with her journey but also uses art as a medium to reflect on
and reconcile with her past.”
New Generation Prize - A Home With No Roof - © Sara Faustino
Wanted Beautiful Home Loving Girl by Cheryl Mukherji<, Based On A True Story by
Charley Tengbergen, and Veiled By Cloud And Mist by Yixi Tian received the New
Generation Prize Honourable Mentions.
Pia Guilmoth’s Flowers Drink The River was selected for a featured interview in Vogue
Italia by Alessia Glaviano, Head of Global Photovogue, to be published in the upcoming
weeks.
The solo exhibition at PhMuseum Lab was awarded to Heirloom by
Lucija Rosc.
PhMuseum's Founding Director Giuseppe Oliverio and Visual Editor Camilla Marrese
comment on their choice:
“Can memory be implanted in one’s body? In Heirloom, Lucija Rosc turns her grandma
Mica’s former gold tooth from the ‘60s into a coating for her own dying tooth. She films
the process, collects family photographs, dental molds and X-rays, she photographs
Mica and herself as the two halves of one same body. Seen as the latest chapter in
Rosc’s long-term artistic dedication to celebrating her grandparents, Heirloom is a
symbolic gesture of visceral attachment, one of her many attempts at connecting layers
of time and materialising heritage.”
Moreover, six artists were granted a 60-min free portfolio review with a mentor of their
choice from the PhMuseum Education Program, recognising their talent and helping
them to further develop their promising projects: Dominique Arieu for A Secret Shines
Metal, Durrah Al Afyouni for Passing, Juliana Quesada for Escazù, A Forgotten Fantasy,
Kelly-Ann Bobb for Vecina: Nay-bah, Tyler Ashford for You Can Be The Dad, and Xusha
Chen for How Are You Doing Now.
Free Portfolio Review - Vecina Nay-bah - © Kelly-Ann Bobb