SDN 2014 Exhibition: Using the Power of Photography to Promote Global Awareness

Exhibition

Winners of SDN's 2014 Call for Entries on Using the Power of Photography to Promote Global Awareness

powerHouse Arena
37 Main Street, Brooklyn, DUMBO, NY

February 27 – March 20, 2014
View installation and panel discussion photos


Gwenn Dubourthoumieu Photograph by Gwenn Dubourthoumieu. Following the raid, the three camps attacked around Nanam
must migrate separately, making them more vulnerable.

Grand Prize Winners: Gwenn Dubourthoumieu and Mark Tuschman
SDN Documentary Prize: Fausto Podavini
Honorable Mentions: Carol Allen Storey and Suvra Kanti Das


From a pool of 140 submissions from across the globe, the jurors chose this outstanding work for recognition. The jurors for support of this Call for Entries were:

  • Shahidul Alam, Founder, Drik Photo Agency, Bangladesh
  • Barbara Ayotte, Director of Strategic Communications, Management Sciences for Health, Boston
  • Dimitri Beck, Editor-in-Chief, Polka Magazine, Paris
  • Manoocher Deghati, AP Middle East Regional Photo Editor, Cairo
  • Jennifer Pritheeva Samuel, Director, Anastasia Photo, New York
  • Glenn Ruga, Founder and Director, SocialDocumentary.net, Boston
     

Gwenn Dubourthoumieu from France and Mark Tuschman from the United States are winners of the Management Sciences for Health (MSH) Photography Fellowship Grand Prize and will each receive a $4,000 honorarium and an expense-paid two-week assignment to document MSH's global health projects. Fausto Podavini from Italy wins the SDN Documentary Prize and will receive a $1,000 cash award. Suvra Kanti Das from Bangladesh and Carol Allen Storey from England are Honorable Mentions.

SDN would like to thank all the photographers who submitted to this call for entries. We would also like to thank our NGO partner, Management Sciences for Health, an international nonprofit working on global health issues in more than 50 countries. (www.msh.org)


Grand Prize/Photo Fellowship with MSH

Gwenn Dubourthoumieu

Gwenn Dubourthoumieu Photograph by Gwenn Dubourthourmieu. Having obtained a rifle, the young Turkana man must
prove that he became a man by participating in a raid.

 

Turkana Warriors, Kenya

Gwenn Dubourthoumieu's portraits are stunning straight on-compositions that remind us of family snapshots except for the casual display of weapons and the rugged urbane beauty of the subjects living on the remote pastures of the Horn of Africa. The drought ravaging the arid and semi-arid areas of the Horn of Africa has imposed a great deal of pressure on the already scarce resources in the region, and exacerbated the persistent conflicts between the pastoral tribes in northern Kenya, the south of the Republic of South Sudan, eastern Uganda and southern Ethiopia. Squeezed one towards the other on increasingly pressurized pastures, the tribes, traditional enemies, multiply attacks to expand their herds and take control of the limited water sources. Every herd boy owns a rifle, even those as young as ten.

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Gwenn Dubourthoumieu
became interested in photography while working in East Africa and the Horn of Africa (Somaliland, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sudan and South Sudan) for NGOs. He moved to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2007 and worked as a professional photographer based in Kinshasa from 2010 to 2012, regularly collaborating, among others, with the French Press Agency (AFP). Gwenn recently moved to Paris and currently works as a freelancer. Since 2010, his work has been regularly awarded. This year, he was awarded the Sophot Prize in France, and was finalist of both the Aftermath grant and the Bourse du Talent. Last year, he received the Photoreporter Festival of Saint Brieuc grant to continue a long-term project about copper mining in the Southeastern province of Katanga, Democratic Republic of the Congo, which also reached the final at the Photo Philanthropy Professional Award. In addition, his work "Turkana warriors" has been short listed at the Sony World Photography Awards in the category "Fine Art - Portraiture", and his series of portraits of women victims of sexual violence in Eastern Congo reached the final of the Bourse du Talent. The same year, his feature about "the child-witches of Kinshasa" was awarded the jury's special prize at the 8th Days Japan International Photojournalism Festival. In 2011, the same work was awarded the jury's special mention at the Roger Pic Prize and the investigation prize at the European Journalism Festival. Gwenn also received the Getty Images Creative Grant. In 2010, he was already short listed among the exceptional finalists of the same grant, and was awarded the jury special prize at the International Scoop and Journalism festival of Angers for his work "Etat d'Armes", about ammunitions and weapons stockpiles in the Congo. As a photographer, Gwenn continues his commitment to humanitarian issues and regularly collaborates with NGOs, foundations and United Nations agencies. His work has also been featured in many international magazines (Paris Match, ELLE, Le Figaro Magazine, VSD, Sunday Times Magazine, De Morgen, Der Spiegel, Days Japan, etc) and is permanently exhibited at the Carte Blanche Gallery in San Francisco.
 

 

Grand Prize/Photography Fellowship with MSH

Mark Tuschman

Mark Tuschman Photograph by Mark Tuschman. A mother and her child in Laos.

 

WOMEN ON THE EDGE: Intimate Portraits of Courage and Dignity

For the past decade, Mark Tuschman have been on a mission: to document the lack of autonomy that millions of women in developing countries have over their own lives and bodies, and the efforts being made to empower them. The photographs in this exhibit are part of a prospective book titled Women on the Edge: Intimate Portraits of Courage and Dignity.

The intent of this book is simple - to pay tribute to the women I've met and to the millions of other women who share their fate. Through his art, Mark wants to bring these women and their stories to the forefront of world consciousness. He want people to see their faces, feel their pain, and understand both their powerlessness and their magnificent, unshakeable dignity. He would also like to pay tribute to the people and organizations that are working heroically to bring positive advances in healthcare, education, and personal empowerment to women and girls. This book and exhibit is his way of honoring them and also speaking out on their behalf.

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Mark Tuschman has worked as an international freelance photographer for more than 33 years. As a photographer committed to issues of global health and development, he received the photographer of the year award from the Global Health Council in 2009-2010. His work has been featured in many internal health and development conferences, including the Pacific Health Summit in London in 2010, a conference promoting women's reproductive health care; and the Audacia Forum, a conference on girls' education in NY in 2011. Most recently, many of his images were used to illustrate the UNFPA 7 Billion Campaign. His photographs were exhibited at the Women Deliver Conference in Malaysia in 2013. In 2012, he documented the issues of dowry abuse and child brides in India; this work was featured at a one man show at the World Affairs Council in San Francisco. For the past two years, he has been featured in Global Visions, a retrospective juried exhibit at the World Affairs Council.

Over the years, he has collaborated with several NGO's including The Global Fund for Women, EngenderHealth, Packard Foundation, Planned Parenthood, WomensTrust and UNFPA to document and promote the essential work of these groups and their grantees.

He is currently documenting the Merck for Mothers initiative that will highlight their programs to reduce maternal mortality. He plans to publish Faces of Courage: Intimate Portraits of Women on the Edge which will document the lack of autonomy that women and girls face in the developing world and the efforts designed to empower them.

"Photography is a universal language and it is my hope that my images will move viewers to respond not only with empathy, but also with action."

—Mark Tuschman
 


SDN Documentary Prize

Fausto Podavini

Fausto Podavini Photograph by Fausto Podavini: He was born between the mountains and he moved to Rome only because he loved me so much, so that he spent all his life in Rome. It wasn't easy for him, but he did.... how can I forget a person like that?

 

Mirella

Mirella is the story of a woman, a mother, a wife, a grandmother. Mirella is 71 years old. She spent 43 years of her life with the only person she loved. Forty three years of sharing, difficulties, laughs and beautiful moments: a family, a house, values handed down. In the last six years something changed, Mirella had to fight against her husband's illness, Alzheimer's.

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Fausto PodaviniFausto Podavini was born in Rome, Italy and works in his hometown. After graduating as an industrial technician specialized in electronics,he completed the Masters in Reportage at the John Kaverdash Academy of Photography in Milan. He started his photographic career as an assistant and studio photographer, quickly shifting to almost exclusively reportage work. Fausto was involved in Mifav (Museum of the Photographic Image and Visual Arts) at the University of Rome- Tor Vergata, where he had the chance to work closely with many photographers and get to know their work. Once he had completely abandoned studio photography, he started freelancing for various NGOs to realize reportages in Italy, Peru, Kenya, and Ethiopia, where he is currently working on some personal projects. In 2009, he started collaborating with the Italian collective of photography WSP, officially becoming a member in 2010; he has since worked with WSP both as a photographer, particularly for collaborative projects, and as a reportage photography teacher. On top of numerous projects in Africa, South America and India, he has also done important projects in his home country, such as a reportage on disability sports, one on a youth correctional facility, and one on Alzheimer's disease.
 


Honorable Mention

Suvra Kanti Das

Suvra Kanti Das Photograph by Suvra Kanti Das: Mariyam and Laboni with their artificial hand, Savar, Bangladesh. Mariyam had her right arm amputated to free her from the rubble when she was rescued nearly 72 hours after the building collapsed and Laboni had her left arm amputated inside the rubble when she was rescued nearly 36 hours after the building collapsed.


Under the Rubble

On April 24, 2013, the eight-storied Rana Plaza collapsed at Savar, Dhaka. The Rana Plaza has four garment factories, a bank, and commercial shops including electronics and clothes. It collapsed in the morning at approximately 8:30 am, an hour after garment workers were forced to join work. The shops and the bank on the lower floors immediately closed after cracks were discovered in the building. Warnings to avoid using the building after cracks appeared the day before had been ignored. The search for the dead ended on May 13 with the death toll of 1,133. Approximately 2,500 injured people were rescued from the building alive. Among the dead, it was impossible to identify 291 bodies. Three hundred people are still missing and approximate 45 people lost a hand or leg.

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Suvra Kanti DasSuvra Kanti Das, born in Chandpur, Bangladesh in 1979, is a visual artist. He passed his childhood in Cox's Bazar. At the age of 15, he started photography with his cousin's small film camera. After completing his degree in Computer Science, in 2009 he enrolled in the Pathshala- South Asian Media Academy for a BA in Photography. During his education period, he also participated in many workshops which were organized by different organizations.

In November 2009, he participated in a workshop in Pathshala with collaboration by Bjerkely Folkehøyskole, Norway. In January 2011, during Chobi Mela VI, Suvra Kanti Das was qualified for Morten Krogvold's workshop. In 2012, he participated in the "International Reporting Workshop" in India for a three-month workshop which was organized under the collaboration programmed of OUC- Norway, Photo circle- Nepal, Drik-India, and Pathshala- South Asian Institute of Photography, from Bangladesh.

At the same time he started working with "Demotix" as a contributing photographer.


Honorable Mention

Carol Allen Storey


Carol Allen Storey Photograph by Carol Allen Storey. Jean-Marie -- ex-prisoner. "I was falsely accused of being a part of the killings and hauled into jail without a trial. After seven tortuous years I finally had a Gacaca trial. The judges interrogated me about the murders and I gave them a first-hand account of what I witnessed - based on my testimony, they convicted me as an 'accomplice' but set me free because I had already spent 7 years in jail.."

 

Fractured Lives: The Aftermath of Genocide

This photographic essay focuses on the daunting task of rebuilding a fractured society through the eyes of the perpetrators, ex-combatants and survivors of the 1994 Rwandan genocide along with the vulnerable generation of young Rwandans growing up in an atmosphere clouded by conflict. The aim of this series was to provide a view of the long-term implications of war and, the solutions on the ground to rebuild these fractured lives.

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Carol Allen StoreyCarol Allen Storey is an award winning photojournalist specializing in chronicling humanitarian and social issues.

"My images are intimate, about issues and citizens I deeply care about. I believe photographs may not be capable of doing the moral work for us, but they can trigger the process of social consciousness."

Storey's work has been exhibited and published internationally. In 2009 she was appointed a UNICEF ambassador. Storey recently won 1st Prize in the Act of Kindness International Award 2013, was a finalist in the Taylor-Wessing Portrait Awards exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery in 2009, 2011, and 2013, Kontinent Awards - Finalist documentary project, a finalist for Social Documentary in 2008, 2009 and 2010 at the New York Photography Festival, and in 2008 and 2010 she was selected for the Press Photographer's Award Year exhibition. Storey has been a nominee finalist at the International Spider Awards each year from 2008 to 2013. She was shortlisted for the 2011 One Life International Portfolio Award. Commissioned by 'Save the Children',

Her solo exhibitions include: 'FRACTURED LIVES' at SW1 Gallery, London, 2012, for International Alert, 'Children of Hope' at the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Kendal, 2011, for the charity Kasese Street Kids. 'Anything Is Possible' at the Association of Photographers Gallery in London, 2009, for the charity Spirituality for Kids. 'The Vanishing Assets of Africa', an installation at the Inmarsat Gallery in London, 2008, culminating in an auction by Christi's benefiting the charity, Télécoms Sans Frontières. 'The Savagery and Poetry of Africa' at the Proud Gallery, London, 2004, for the international charity WWF.

For the past six years, Storey has been developing a personal project, ANGELS at the edge of darkness, which illuminates the plight of women and children managing poverty and the AIDS pandemic in Africa.

Storey is a graduate with distinction of the Central St. Martins, Master Photography programme, 2000. She also earned a BA at Syracuse University and her MA at Columbia University. She is a member of Association of Photographers, British Press Photographers Association (board member), Royal Photographic Society, National Press Photographers Association, and World Photography Academy (founding member).

 

 

Exhibition Sponsored by:

Digital Silver Imaging

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