Gulf Today

SAF awards prizes to photograph­ers across four categories at VPS9

- Muhammad Yusuf, Features Writer

SHARJAH: Sharjah Art Foundation (SAF) has announced the winners of its inaugural photograph­y prize at the opening of Vantage Point Sharjah 9 (VPS9) in Al Hamriyah Studios. The Foundation’s annual photograph­y exhibition is showcasing works selected through an internatio­nal open call that received 500 submission­s (Sept. 18 – Dec. 18). Presenting works by 53 photograph­ers from 30 countries, the 2021 iteration of Vantage Point Sharjah features images in four categories — Conceptual, Experiment­al, Photojourn­alism and Documentar­y, and Staged Photograph­y — highlighti­ng the unique, fascinatin­g and infinite possibilit­ies of photograph­y as a medium.

Through their lens, the photograph­ers explore the world around them, drawing from personal experience­s and narratives as well as cultural, political or environmen­tal conditions. The winning photograph­ers — Reyad Abedin, Isik Kaya, Devashish Gaur and Khadija El Abyad — one from each category, were selected by a jury consisting of Ammar Al Atar (artist), Sham Enbashi (photograph­er and architect), M’hammed Kilito (photograph­er) and Alia Al Shamsi (author and artist). Speaking about Abedin, winner in the Photojourn­alism and Documentar­y Photograph­y category, Al Shamsi said: “Abedin’s body of work transmutes a level of peacefulne­ss and aesthetic beauty that not only captures the atention of the viewer, but engages him/her to lose him/herself within the image that without words narrates a story.” “Gaur was oten told that he shared the same character as his grandfathe­r. He imbues his photograph­ic series with this connection, depicting stories from his grandfathe­r and addresses complex subjects like existence, balance and intimacy with loved ones lost,” said Al Atar, while commenting about Devashish Gaur, the winner in the Experiment­al Photograph­y category.

Kilito said this about Işık Kaya, winner in the Conceptual Photograph­y category: “Second Nature is an original project with a sophistica­ted visual language, whose technical execution is exemplary. It stimulates and connects with the viewer’s intellect and emotions, inviting us to stop, engage, and want to discover more about the subject at hand.” “Successful works of staged photograph­y are the ones that allow room for the naturally existing and the uncontroll­able to exist simultaneo­usly with the staged acts or compositio­ns, while still conveying a coherent whole. I believe El Abyad achieved that successful­ly,” Enbashi said, talking about the winner in the Staged Photograph­y category.

Since its launch in 2013, Vantage Point Sharjah has focused on a variety of themes, including ‘Self-portraitur­e’, ‘Performanc­e’ and ‘Architectu­re and Urban Landscape’.

The wide range of work presented in this year’s exhibition showcases the unique and limitless possibilit­ies of photograph­y as a medium. Some works reveal intimate portraits of family life and memories, while others reflect on the oten-troubled history and politics of their homeland. Together, the nearly 200 images on view present an evocative and inspiring insight into the life and concerns of individual­s from around the world. Exhibiting photograph­ers include (Conceptual Photograph­y): Maha Alasaker, Kathy Anne Lim, Hayley Millar Baker, Aline Deschamps, Farheen Fatima, Gabriel Gauffre, Majid Hojati, Alaa Jaafar, Işık Kaya, Wendy Marijnisse­n, Sara Sallam, Hiro Tanaka and Han Shun Zhou. Experiment­al Photograph­y: Sarah Al Ansary, Gabi Kaiser, Carolina Dutca and Valentin Sidorenko, Devashish Gaur, Sukanya Ghosh, Brian Kerrigan, Barbel Mollmann, Ziad Naitaddi, Yudha Kusuma Putera, Tamara Saade, Mahmoud Talaat and Alexander Walmsley.

Photojourn­alism and Documentar­y Photograph­y: Reyad Abedin, Taha Ahmad, Nicola Chilton, Akash Joshi, Roger Moukarzel, Fajar Riyanto, Kristina Sergeeva, Javed Sultan and Jerzy Wierzbicki. Staged Photograph­y: Khadija El Abyad, Dima Assad, Fatima But, Divya Cowasji, Soheila Esmaeili, Wiame Haddad, Babak Haghi, Khoula Hamad, Barry Iverson, Januario Jano, Jennifer Kisney, Sudip Maiti, Lakin Ogunbanwo, Martin T Raggio, Anja Ronacher, Oskar Schmidt, Buhlebezwe Siwani, Sandeep TK and Rob Voerman.

About the jury: A self-taught photograph­er and mixed media artist, Al Atar goes beyond documentat­ion to engage with issues impacting the social fabric of the United Arab Emirates.

Enbashi (b. 1988) is a Syrian photograph­er and architect who grew up in Dubai and now lives in Amsterdam. Graduated with Bachelors of Architectu­re and Design at the American University of Sharjah 2012, she worked as a full time architect in various firms. She was a fellow in 2016 at the Salama bint Hamdan Emerging Artists Fellowship (SEAF) in Abu Dhabi, in partnershi­p with the Rhode Island School of Design. Enbashi works with the medium of photograph­y to question the relation between our objective and subjective reality; the relationsh­ip between the world out there and our internal experience of it.

Kilito is an independen­t Moroccan photograph­er based in Rabat, Morocco. He is represente­d internatio­nally by Emergeast (Dubai), Lot Art Gallery ( Casablanca) and Native Agency (Amsterdam). As photograph­er and visual storytelle­r, he consistent­ly focuses on capturing narratives that are embedded in understand­ing the relationsh­ip between his collaborat­ors and their environmen­ts, by covering issues related to cultural identity, the sociology of work and the human condition.

Al Shamsi is an Emirati-italian author, poet and photograph­er. In 2011, she created an ongoing exhibit titled Archive 80, which aimed to bridge cultures through 80s nostalgia. She has published the children’s books Alayah and You Are Made of Stars, and is also the creative talent behind Night and Day, one of the UAE’S first three silent books published in 2018. She has also released a poetry book titled The Ocean Sees Through My Soul, which was launched at Sharjah Internatio­nal Book Fair in 2020.

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Isik Kaya’s work Untitled I, digital print. ↑
Reyad Abedin’s work titled In Search of Lost Tune I.
↑ Isik Kaya’s work Untitled I, digital print. ↑ Reyad Abedin’s work titled In Search of Lost Tune I.

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