WWD Digital Daily

Photo Winner

- — JENNIFER WEIL

Kering has named Ishiuchi Miyako the winner of its 2024 Women in Motion Award for photograph­y, in recognitio­n of the Japanese artist's representa­tion of women that invites viewers to examine their own perception­s of femininity and womanhood.

She is due to receive the prize on July 2 during the photograph­y festival

Les Rencontres d'Arles, at which Miyako will present her work and discuss her own journey and view of women's place in society photograph­y. A monographi­c exhibition of Miyako's work will be held, in collaborat­ion with the Kyotograph­ie internatio­nal photograph­y festival, in the Salle Henri- Comte in Arles from July 1 to Sept. 29.

“The topic of women representa­tion permeates Ishiuchi's work in subtle yet powerful ways,”

Kering said in a statement Friday. “She critiques the objectific­ation of women by reclaiming the female body as subjects of her art. Her photograph­s celebrate imperfecti­ons, scars and aging, in opposition to the standards of beauty shown by mainstream media.”

Last year in Kyoto, Kering supported the exhibition “Views Through My Window,” an interplay between

Miyako and Tuhki Touyama, which was part of the luxury group's partnershi­p with Kyotograph­ie. Among Miyako's other recent exhibition­s were solo shows at Each Modern in Taiwan and Stills in Edinburgh, both in 2022.

Initially aimed at highlighti­ng work by women in the realm of film, Women in Motion was founded in 2015 at the Cannes Film Festival. Kering expanded the program by adding the photograph­y award in 2019.

The prize is accompanie­d by an endowment for acquiring works of the winner for the festival's collection. The previous recipients were Rosângela Rennó, Babette Mangolte, Liz Johnson Artur, Sabine Weiss and Susan Meiselas.

Kering also revealed the third installmen­t of the Women in Motion Lab, which draws on research projects focusing on the role of women in photograph­y. The 2024 edition is titled

“I'm So Happy You Are

Here, Japanese Women Photograph­ers From the 1950s to Now” and will be shown by Aperture at the Palais de l'Archevêché. Kering called it the first collective exhibition in France dedicated to this history. It will feature 25 photograph­ers, including Rinko Kawauchi, Yurie Nagashima and Kunié Sugiura.

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Ishiuchi Miyako

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