Gallery of Photography Ireland is delighted to be hosting the eighth cycle of the Prix Pictet, which this year takes the theme of Hope. It is a particularly significant theme for a world now slowly emerging from the shadow of a devastating pandemic and facing equally formidable challenges in the years ahead. 

The Prix Pictet is the world’s leading prize for photography and sustainability. Its purpose is to harness the power of photography to draw global attention to critical sustainability issues that threaten humanity and the planet that we share with the rest of the natural world. We are especially pleased to have two Irish photographers nominated for such a prestigious award. 

The nominees featured in this exhibition are:

Shahidul Alam (BGD), Joana Choumali (CIV), Margaret Courtney-Clarke (NAM), Rena Effendi (AZ), Lucas Foglia (US), Janelle Lynch (US), Ross McDonnell (IRL), Gideon Mendel (SA), Ivor Prickett (IRL), Robin Rhode (SA), Awoiska van der Molen (NL) and Alexia Webster (SA).

The winner for this cycle of the prize is Joana Choumali. Her work Ça va aller consists of pictures taken following the terrorist attacks in the town of Grand-Bassam on the Ivory Coast, West Africa. Choumali wandered the empty streets, photographing with her iPhone so as not to intrude and disrupt people’s mourning. In this region, it is rare to discuss mental health and any psychological trauma is often seen as weakness. Conversations are often met with ‘ça va aller’ – a blanket expression for ‘it will be ok.’ Choumali found that she could process the pain she felt through embroidery. Adding colourful stitches to her images had a cathartic, meditative effect, allowing her to lay down her emotions. Embroidering these photographs became an act of channeling hope and resilience.

Over 600 photographers were nominated for Hope by a global network of nominators. After a rich debate the jury arrived at a final shortlist of twelve artists. As a group the artists present Hope as a fragile and elusive quality that is nevertheless capable of overcoming despair. Hope is present even in the darkest of these images. The late Kofi Annan, President of the Prix Pictet, touched on the subject of hope in his closing remarks at the Prix Pictet awards ceremony in November 2017: “It is perhaps in the ability to carry on in adversity that there lies hope for us all.

The Prix Pictet Award Ceremony, where Joana Choumali was announced as the eighth laureate of the Prix Pictet, took place on the 13 November 2019 at the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Untitled. Joana Choumali. 2019

Winner

Joana Choumali, Born 1974, Côte d'Ivoire, female. Lives and works in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire. Joana Choumali studied graphic arts in Casablanca, Morocco, and worked as an art director in an advertising agency before embarking on her photography career.


Shortlist

Hajera orders supplies for her orphanage while checking the hair of one of the children for lice. Shahidul Alam. 2014

Shahidul Alam, Born 1955, Bangladesh, male. Lives and works in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Photographer, writer, curator and human rights activist Shahidul Alam obtained a PhD in Chemistry from London University before taking up photography.

Embodying Hope. A morning in the sand dunes. Margaret Courtney-Clarke 2015

Margaret Courtney-Clarke, Born 1949, Namibia, female. Lives in Swakopmund, Namibia. Margaret Courtney-Clarke studied art and photography in South Africa and has spent the last four decades working as a photographer in Italy, the United States and across Africa.

Perhaps in our ability to carry on in adversity lies hope for us all. Hope that, despite the catastrophic damage that we have visited upon the natural world and upon the lives of our most vulnerable citizens, it is not too late to reverse the damage that we have done.
— Kofi Annan (1938-2018), Hon. President, Prix Pictet, 2017

Members of the Borca family relax after a long day at work on the land. Rena Effendi. 2012

Rena Effendi, Born 1977, Azerbaijan, female. Lives and works in Istanbul, Turkey. Educated as a linguist, Rena Effendi’s early work focused on the oil industry’s effects on people’s lives in her region.

Rachel Mud Bathing, Virginia. Lucas Foglia. 2009

Lucas Foglia, Born 1983, United States, Male. Lives and works in San Francisco, United States. His third book, Human Nature, was published in 2017 by Nazraeli Press.

Summer Wreath. Janelle Lynch. 2017

Janelle Lynch, Born 1969, USA, female. Lives and works in New York, United States. Lynch received an MFA in Photography from the School of Visual Arts, New York where she studied with Joel Sternfeld and Stephen Shore. In 2003, she completed the Master Class in Photography, a one-on-one tutorial with Shore at Bard College.

A young woman, asphyxiated by tear gas, is helped by other mourners after the political funeral of four young activists killed in clashes with the police in Duduza Township. July 1985. Gideon Mendel. scanned and reframed in 2016

Gideon Mendel, Born 1959, South Africa, male. Lives and works in London, United Kingdom. He studied Psychology and African History at the University of Cape Town. He began photographing in the 1980s, during the final years of apartheid.

Limbs 9. Ross McDonnell. 2012

Ross McDonnell, Born 1979, Ireland. Lives and works in New York. His work is manifested in long term documentary projects focused on themes of sustainability, conflict, migration and ecology.

An unidentified young boy, who was carried out of the last ISIS-controlled area in the Old City of Mosul by a man suspected of being a militant, is cared for by Iraqi special forces soldiers. Ivor Prickett. 2017

Ivor Prickett, Born 1983, Ireland, male. Lives and works in Europe and the Middle East. Most recently the work of Ivor Prickett has focused on the fight to defeat ISIS in Iraq and Syria. Working exclusively for the The New York Times he spent months on the ground reporting in both words and pictures.

Black Friday (Selected still image 1) Robin Rhode. 2017

Robin Rhode, Born 1976, South Africa, male. Lives and works in Berlin, Germany. A multidisciplinary artist, he engages in a variety of visual languages such as photography, performance, drawing and sculpture to create arrestingly beautiful narratives that are brought to life using quotidian materials such as soap, charcoal, chalk and paint

#448-18 Awoiska van der Molen. 2018

Awoiska van der Molen, Born 1972, Netherlands, female. Lives and works in Amsterdam, Netherlands. She studied Architecture and Design followed by Photography at Minerva Art Academy Groningen, Netherlands.

Two friends pose for their portrait on the corner of Cornwell and Hercules Street in Woodstock, Cape Town, South Africa. Alexia Webster. 2011

Alexia Webster, Born 1979, South Africa. Lives and works in New York, United States. Alexia Webster is a photographer and visual artist whose work explores intimacy, family and identity across the African continent and beyond.

Group tours available, please email info@galleryofphotography.ie for more details

Group tours available, please email info@galleryofphotography.ie for more details

 

Exhibition dates

September 17th - November 6th 2021

Masks and social distancing please, no booking required.

Gallery information

OPENING HOURS

Open 6 days:

Tuesday - Saturday, 11am - 5pm

Open Mondays by appointment for ongoing education, artists archiving and training.

Closed Sundays

Closed for bank holidays and public holidays

Admission is free 

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Gallery of Photography Ireland

Meeting House Square,

Temple Bar,

Dublin D02 X406, Ireland