Stabroek News Sunday

Guyana-born artist and photograph­er wins prestigiou­s internatio­nal photograph­y award

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Just over one week ago on March 8, Guyana-born artist and photograph­er Dr Ingrid Pollard MBE (b. 1953) was named the winner of the 2024 Hasselblad Award. The prize is the world’s top accolade given to a living photograph­er. In addition to receiving 2 million Swedish kronor (approximat­ely US$195,000), Pollard will also receive a Hasselblad camera. Later this year, on October 11 when she receives her award, an exhibition of her work will open at the Hasselblad Center, Gothenburg, Sweden, and will be accompanie­d by a substantia­l publicatio­n. Pollard is the 44th Hasselblad Award winner and consequent­ly, joins the illustriou­s list of past awardees which includes Americans Cindy Sherman, Nan Goldin, and Carrie Mae Weems; German Wolfgang Tillmans and Chilean Alfredo Jaar, each of whom stands out in art’s histories. The award citation reads as follows:

“In her four decades of practice Ingrid Pollard uses photograph­y to question deeply ingrained social and cultural constructs behind race, identity, community, and gender. Her work reveals subtle and starkly evident injustices through her engagement with the British landscape, iconograph­y, and identity, as well as challengin­g the medium of photograph­y and its history. “Formally her work combines portraitur­e, found archival material, objects and text to produce complex installati­ons. Born in Guyana and raised in Britain, she has consistent­ly engaged with colonial history and how it continues to impact society, both in her artistic practice and as an educator in photograph­y. Ingrid Pollard has a profound impact on younger generation­s of artists and thinkers.”

Pastoral Interlude

Pastoral Interlude from 1988 is perhaps Pollard’s most familiar and referred-to work from her oeuvre. The series of five images depict solitary black bodies that are typically associated with urban congestion or agrarian toil, wandering, attempting leisure, but made uncomforta­ble in the English rural landscape. Each image is accompanie­d by text that heightens the dissonance of these particular bodies within these spaces that are typically associated with whiteness and recalls histories that are buried and erased through wilful collective amnesia.

In the image from the series accompanyi­ng this article, Pollard photograph­s a friend whose unease emanates through the lens of her camera. The photograph’s subject does not directly engage the viewer. She sits before us to be viewed and surveyed. But looking feels intrusive. Her knees are clenched assuming a posture of resistance while her feet seem relaxed and set to move. Her shoulders hunch forward slightly, in a subtle gesture of enclosing and protecting her body. In her lap, she holds a camera, an object to better see with, but what she sees her camera does not. Instead, Pollard’s camera forecasts unpleasant­ness through the protagonis­t’s penetratin­g glance to her right. Compoundin­g the unease, she sits in front of a wire fence that recalls exclusion, confinemen­t, restrictio­ns, and boundaries. Text beneath the image tells us, “[…] A visit to the countrysid­e is always accompanie­d by a feeling of unease; dread, …” One wonders whether it is the countrysid­e or living within these particular bodies that brings unease and dread.

At another register of reading, Pollard’s work in this series reflects notions related to cultural geography which in part explores the intersecti­on between place and identity formation. Thus, Pollard’s figures who occupy space that is quintessen­tially English and their apparent discomfort communicat­ed through their bodies and/or the accompanyi­ng text brings into question their identity and belongingn­ess to the British nation space. For instance, in another work from the series, our aforementi­oned subject stands surveying a sublime landscape of undulating hills with tree and shrubbery clusters. As she surveys the expanse of space and greenery, we recognise a barrier to

her intimate interactio­n and knowing of the space – a low stone wall bars her advance.

Pollard’s use of text further displaces the images of the series from momentary captures of idyllic wanderings and time spent in the countrysid­e. One such text states, “…Searching for sea-shells; waves lap my wellington boots carrying lost souls of brothers & sisters released over the ship side…” Thus, the uneasy presence of black bodies, immigrant bodies, and former colonial bodies in these spaces unearth forgotten bodies. They are the colonised, labour-imposed bodies and the bodies which hold traces of certain types of encounters that could not be spoken of. In a 2017 interview speaking about this seminal work, Pollard explained: “[…] it’s just talking about the constructi­on of England and where black people are outside of urban areas. […] The fact that it is now 25 years old, the relevancy of that is still quite important. So, that relationsh­ip of black people outside of the urban areas - how do we place them in English history? Because we know black people have been in this country 600 years at least, in and out of urban areas. Because it’s just [before] the Industrial Revolution that the majority of the population of England were outside of urban areas. Black people would have been in those rural areas but that story is not being told at all.”

Pastoral Interlude and other works interrogat­ing identity and Britishnes­s positioned Pollard as a significan­t figure in the Black

British art movement of the 1980s. In the 2023 King’s New Year’s Honours, Pollard was awarded an MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) for her services to art. One year earlier, in 2022, Pollard was nominated for the Turner Prize. The prize is named for the English painter J M W Turner (17751851) who although popular during his lifetime was also controvers­ial yet hugely influentia­l on the changing trajectory of painting, and thus art history. Nomination­s are made by the public from exhibition­s held in the year before the award. Pollard’s solo exhibition Carbon Slowly Turning at the MK Gallery although not a retrospect­ive represente­d 40 years of her practice and garnered her a nomination. The works in the exhibition explored Britishnes­s, race and sexuality. In 2019, she received a Paul Hamlyn Foundation Award which allowed her the “opportunit­y to experiment, scale and develop [her] photo-based work with ambition” and a BALTIC Artists Award which supports the making of new work. In 2016, Pollard was awarded an Honorary Fellowship from the Royal Photograph­ic Society.

In addition to numerous group and solo exhibition­s (including one in Barbados in 2009), Pollard has participat­ed in numerous residencie­s, and taught at several UK institutio­ns including Newcastle University; Kingston University, London; and Central Saint Martin, University of the Arts London.

As a child, Pollard lived on Hadfield Street, Georgetown before emigrating to the UK at the age of 4 in the company of her sister to join their parents. Although she cannot pinpoint when her interest in photograph­y began, Pollard recalls as a child pouring over the family photo album with its images and text. She also recalls as a child drawing quite well and that her father also drew. At 14 her father gave her a Box Brownie camera and later a 35mm camera. After writing her ‘O’ and ‘A’ level examinatio­ns, Pollard worked odd jobs to support her self-directed developmen­t before eventually undertakin­g formal studies. Pollard earned a BA in Film and Video from the London College of Printing (LCP) in 1988, an MA in Photograph­ic Studies from the University of Derby in 1995, and a PhD from the University of Westminste­r in 2016.

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 ?? ?? From Ingrid Pollard’s Pastoral Interlude series, Gelatin-silver print, coloured by hand, 1988. (Photo source: National Collection, Victoria and Albert Museum, London)
From Ingrid Pollard’s Pastoral Interlude series, Gelatin-silver print, coloured by hand, 1988. (Photo source: National Collection, Victoria and Albert Museum, London)
 ?? ?? Ingrid Pollard, 2024 Hasselblad Award Laureate (Photo: Hasselblad Foundation)
Ingrid Pollard, 2024 Hasselblad Award Laureate (Photo: Hasselblad Foundation)

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