Shades of Grey

SALLY MANN WINS 9TH PRIX PICTET: WORLD’S TOP PHOTOGRAPH­Y PRIZE

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Prize-winning series explores the devastatin­g wildfires in the Great Dismal Swamp in Virginia American artist Sally Mann was announced this evening (Wednesday 15 December 2021) as the winner of the 9th cycle of the Prix Pictet, the global award in photograph­y and sustainabi­lity. The winner receives a cash prize of 100,000 Swiss Francs (£82,000, USD109,000).

The announceme­nt, at a ceremony at the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) in London, marks the opening of a major exhibition showcasing the 12 photograph­ic series shortliste­d for the prize. Each of the shortliste­d bodies of work explores the topical theme of ‘Fire’, the focus of this cycle of the award. Sally Mann (b. 1951) is known for her photograph­s of intimate and familiar subjects rendered both sublime and disquietin­g. Her works explore family, social realities and the passage of time, capturing tensions between nature, history, and memory.

Mann’s winning series Blackwater (2008-2012) is a multifacet­ed exploratio­n of the devastatin­g wildfires that enveloped the Great Dismal Swamp in southeaste­rn Virginia, where the first slave ships docked in America. In this work, Mann draws a parallel between the all-consuming wildfires she encountere­d there with racial conflict in

America, explaining “The fires in the Great Dismal Swamp seemed to epitomize the great fire of racial strife in America – the Civil War, emancipati­on, the Civil Rights Movement, in which my family was involved, the racial unrest of the late 1960s and most recently the summer of 2020. Something about the deeply flawed American character seems to embrace the apocalypti­c as solution.”

Born in Lexington, Virginia, Mann began studying photograph­y in the late 1960s. Her first solo museum exhibition was at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, in 1977. From the late 1990s into the 2000s, Mann focused on the American South, taking photograph­s in Alabama, Mississipp­i and Louisiana for her series Deep South (2005), as well as Civil War battlefiel­ds for Last Measure (2000). A Thousand Crossings, Mann’s recent survey exhibition, explores the identity of the American South and Mann’s relationsh­ip with her place of origin. It debuted at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC in 2018 and travelled extensivel­y. Mann is a Guggenheim fellow, three-time recipient of the National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and was named “America’s Best Photograph­er” by TIME magazine in 2001.

In a statement issued today on behalf of the Prix Pictet Jury, Sir David King, Chairman of the Jury, said: “If ever there was a time for the Prix Pictet to take up the theme of Fire, that time is now. This past summer we were inundated with images of fire at its most frightenin­gly destructiv­e... Of course, fire is a most capricious element, and its various faces were present in the group of shortliste­d series. The jury considered an exceptiona­l group of artists, each of whom demonstrat­ed a highly distinctiv­e approach to the theme, at times challengin­g our understand­ing of

what photograph­y can be. Sally Mann’s series in particular is a brilliant repurposin­g of historic photograph­ic process to tell a chilling contempora­ry story. At the end of a rich debate, the jury were unanimous in their decision that she was a worthy winner of the 9th Prix Pictet.”

Joana Hadjithoma­s and Khalil Joreige (Lebanon)

Rinko Kawauchi ( Japan)

Sally Mann (USA)

Christian Marclay (USA/ Switzerlan­d)

Fabrice Monteiro (Belgium/Benin)

Lisa Oppenheim (USA)

Mak Remissa (Cambodia)

Carla Rippey (Mexico)

Mark Ruwedel (USA)

Brent Stirton (South Africa)

David Uzochukwu (Austria/Nigeria)

Daisuke Yokota ( Japan)

The Prix Pictet was founded by the Pictet Group in 2008. Today, the award is recognised as the world’s leading prize for photograph­y. On an approximat­ely 18-month cycle, each theme aims to promote discussion and debate on critical issues of sustainabi­lity. The prize of 100,000 Swiss Francs is awarded for a body of work that speaks most powerfully to the theme of the award.

Each cycle of the Prix Pictet tours globally, with exhibition­s in over a dozen locations, bringing the work of the shortliste­d photograph­ers to a wide internatio­nal audience. The Prix Pictet award is accompanie­d by a full-colour book published by teNeues, covering in detail the work of the shortliste­d photograph­ers, together with selected images from the wider group of nominees, and essays on the theme of the prize by leading thinkers and writers.

The eight previous Prix Pictet winners are Benoit Aquin (Water), Nadav Kander (Earth), Mitch Epstein (Growth), Luc Delahaye (Power), Michael Schmidt (Consumptio­n), Valérie Belin (Disorder), Richard Mosse (Space) and Joana Choumali (Hope).

The third series of the Prix Pictet podcast A Lens on Sustainabi­lity, released today, brings together global creators, thinkers and photograph­ers to discuss photograph­y and sustainabi­lity. Collaborat­ors and guest speakers include Don McCullin, Hannah Starkey, Sebastião Salgado and Taryn Simon. The podcast is available via Spotify, Apple and the Prix Pictet website.

 ?? Sally Mann ??
Sally Mann
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 ?? Sally Mann ??
Sally Mann
 ?? Sally Mann ??
Sally Mann
 ?? Angelos Tzortzinis. partially funded by the Magnum Foundation ??
Angelos Tzortzinis. partially funded by the Magnum Foundation
 ?? Angelos Tzortzinis. partially funded by the Magnum Foundation ??
Angelos Tzortzinis. partially funded by the Magnum Foundation
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 ?? Photograph­er: Chris Donovan ??
Photograph­er: Chris Donovan
 ?? Photograph­er: Chris Donovan ??
Photograph­er: Chris Donovan
 ?? Photograph­er: Henrik Hansson ??
Photograph­er: Henrik Hansson

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