Sunday, October 6, 2024

Prix Pictet HUMAN: A Photography Exhibition You Won’t Soon Forget at MOPA

By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt. Photos by Maurice Hewitt.

 

Luciérnaga (Firefly) by Yael Martínez (Taxco, Mexico). The image above is part of the large glittery series that may first command your attention as you enter the gallery. The photographer calls it an essay on the resilience of those who have gone through violence and trauma in Mexico and Latin America. He made pinpricks in each photograph and shone light through the holes to show how we as human beings can transform terrible situations, changing darkness into light. “I believe that when photography engages with education, culture, and politics, we can create a better world,” he writes.

Prix Pictet. I’d never heard the name before but now I know it’s “the world’s leading award for photography and sustainability” and this is its 10th cycle of offering awards, each time with a different theme.

Photographers must be nominated by one of the 300-plus curators, critics, and visual arts specialists in the Prize’s network, and each submission must be a series of photographs that in some way addresses the fragile state of our planet and the current theme. An independent jury then selects a shortlist of those they consider most compelling, and after the shortlisted pieces have been seen in an exhibition, a winner is chosen and given a large cash prize in Swiss Francs. 

All the shortlisted works then go on a worldwide tour, and there’s only one North American site included: MOPA, the Museum of Photographic Arts in Balboa Park, which is now part of SDMA (San Diego Museum of Modern Art) and the last stop on the tour.

So lucky San Diegans will be able to admire the work of 12 brilliant visual storytellers at MOPA through December 15th. What follows is only a small taste of what you’ll see there… and you’ll get a free catalog too.

Jannat by Gauri Gill

Urma & Nimli by Gauri Gill

Two photographs from Notes from the Desert by Gauri Gill (New Delhi, India). She was announced as the winner of the 10th Prix Pictet in September 2023, when the exhibition opened at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. "To live poor and landless in the desert amounts to an inescapable reliance on oneself, on each other and on nature," she wrote in her artist's statement. We were mesmerized by the unusual mirror image and the upside-down portrait of two very young girls.

 

Richard Renaldi

Richard Renaldi, the only American in the exhibition, happened to be at MOPA when we were there. Born in Chicago and based in New York City, his Disturbed Harmonies series refers to “troubled men in a troubled world” and his desire to “pull men back into parallel with the natural world.” In the images here, he placed an old man he met in Turkey and a tattooed West Village New Yorker in touch with nature.


Hoda Afshar

 
Hoda Afshar

Two images from Speak the Wind by Hoda Afshar (born in Tehran, Iran; based in Melbourne, Australia). In the local culture of islands off the southern coast of Iran, the winds are considered harmful, the cause of disease and other afflictions, so traditional leaders speak to the wind in tongues to negotiate its departure. These images don’t reference those interactions, but they certainly grabbed our attention.

 

Vanessa Winship
A riveting portrait of young girls in lace-collared uniforms by Vanessa Winship (based in Folkestone, U.K. and Mandritsa, Bulgaria) from her series Sweet Nothings: Schoolgirls from the Borderlands of Eastern Anatolia. Life is difficult in those parts, and these two girls, part of a government campaign to get more girls into schools, don’t seem to be enjoying their moment.

 

Siân Davey

Lila, a child in The Garden, a series by Siân Davey (based in Devon, U.K), who photographed people in their surrounding community that she and her son met over the wall of their backyard garden. “As the flowers opened, they called in…mothers and daughters, grandparents, the lonely, the marginalized, teenagers, new lovers, the heartbroken,” she writes. “The Garden became…a metaphor for the human heart.”


Ragnar Axelrod


Ragnar Axelrod

 
Two untitled images by Ragnar Axelrod, born and based in Iceland, from his series Where the World is Melting. “In the regions around the Arctic, change is happening more quickly than anywhere on earth,” he writes. “Sea ice and glaciers are melting fast, and…thousand-year-old traditions of hunter societies are on the decline…Now the glaciers are retracting, the Siberian tundra is thawing, and wildfires are raging…Where there is life, there is hope, and people living in the Arctic must have that hope…There are opportunities and solutions. We must never forget that.”

Prix Pictet HUMAN at MOPA@SDMA
On view through December 15, 2024.
1659 El Prado in Balboa Park
HOURS: Thursday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
(Hours may change during holidays and special events)
Admission: Pay what you wish.
INFO@SDMART.com


Lonnie Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net 

No comments:

Post a Comment