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Smith Fund Names Grant Finalists in Humanistic Photography Share This on LinkedIn   Tweet This   Forward This

7 September 2022

The W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund has announced the finalists in the 43rd annual W. Eugene Smith Grant for Humanistic Photography. Finalists have also been named in the Smith Fund's 5th annual Student category and 26th annual Howard Chapnick Grant, which is awarded to encourage leadership in any field ancillary to photojournalism, such as picture editing, research, education and management.

Murat Yazar. From the documentary 'Shadows of Kurdistan: A photographic research of a cultural identity'.

The Smith Fund also announced that it will return to its longtime tradition of awarding one individual photographer with a $40,000 grant.

SMITH MEMORIAL GRANT FINALISTS

  • Mary F. Calvert for Left Behind: Military Sexual Assault and Suicide (United States)
  • Matthieu Chazal for The Ghosts of Ararat (France)
  • Maxim Dondyuk for Ukraine 2014/22 (Ukraine)
  • Russell Frederick for A Love Letter to Bed Stuy (United States)
  • Earlie Hudnall for Metamorphosis: Photographing a Community in Change (United States)
  • Amit Madheshiya for "Untitled" (India)
  • Ta Mwe for "Uprising in Myanmar" (Myanmar/Burma)
  • Murat Yazar for Shadows of Kurdistan. A Photographic Research of a Cultural Identity (Eastern Turkey, living in Italy)

CHAPNICK GRANT FINALISTS

  • Seydou Camara: Educational Project for Visual and Citizenship Culture in Bamako (Mali)
  • Ala Kheir: Educational and Collaboration Project in Sudan (Sudan)
  • Jessica Lim: Angkor Photo Festival and Workshops (Cambodia)
  • Raphaela Rosella: Auto-ethnographic Project with Communities of Incarceration (Australia)

SMITH STUDENT GRANT FINALISTS

  • Sumi Anjuman: Hope Has Let the Light Remain (Bangladesh)
  • Trent Bozeman: The Mayor Left (United States)
  • Mohamed Mahdy: Here the Doors Don't Know Me (Egypt)
  • Taniya Sarkar: Nothing Left to Call Home (India)

For more information see the news release below.

The W. Eugene Smith Fund Names Finalists in 43rd Annual Grants in Humanistic Photography

16 Photographers Vie for $75K in Grants / Fellowships Honoring Eugene Smith / Howard Chapnick

Increased Financial Support from the Leonian Foundation Expands Fellowship Grants

NEW YORK -- The W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund is pleased to announce the list of finalists in the 43rd annual W. Eugene Smith Grant for Humanistic Photography. Finalists have also been named in the Smith Fund's 5th annual Student category and 26th annual Howard Chapnick Grant, which is awarded to encourage leadership in any field ancillary to photojournalism, such as picture editing, research, education and management. The Smith Fund also announced that it will return to its longtime tradition of awarding one individual photographer with a $40,000 grant.

The Phillip and Edith Leonian Foundation, a longtime supporter of the Eugene Smith Fund, extended their contribution to The Fund, allowing its Fellowship grant to increase from $5,000 to $10,000 and its two Finalist grants from $2,500 to $5,000, beginning this year. "We are beyond grateful to the Leonian Foundation and this year's fellow and finalists will immediately benefit from The Phillip and Edith Leonian Foundation's expanded support and contribution," noted Scott Thode, president of the W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund.

Since the Smith Fund's inception in 1979, it has awarded more than $1.3 million to photographers whose past work and proposed projects follow in the tradition of W. Eugene Smith's career as a photographic essayist. Despite economic headwinds and continued challenges surrounding the pandemic, the Smith Fund grants received several hundred entries from 72 countries this year with the Student grant and Chapnick grant each receiving the most entries ever. Grant recipients will be announced in October, however the Smith Fund Board of Trustees confirmed that a formal, in-person award presentation is not planned for this year.

"The quality of entries for all three grants seems to get better every year and this year was certainly no exception," said Scott Thode. "I know the judges had some very difficult decisions to make and want to thank them for their time, expertise and passion. I hope they enjoyed the process."

The following is a list of finalists for the 2022 W. Eugene Smith, Howard Chapnick and Smith Fund Student grants.

2022 W. Eugene Smith Memorial Grant Finalists

  • Mary F. Calvert: "Left Behind: Military Sexual Assault and Suicide" (United States)
  • Matthieu Chazal: "The Ghosts of Ararat" (France)
  • Maxim Dondyuk: "Ukraine 2014/22" (Ukraine)
  • Russell Frederick: "A Love Letter to Bed Stuy" (United States)
  • Earlie Hudnall: "Metamorphosis: Photographing a Community in Change" (United States)
  • Amit Madheshiya: "Untitled" (India)
  • Ta Mwe: "Uprising in Myanmar" (Myanmar/Burma)
  • Murat Yazar: "Shadows of Kurdistan. A Photographic Research of a Cultural Identity" (Eastern Turkey, living in Italy)

"It was a tremendous privilege and responsibility to review several hundred applications submitted for the W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund Grant and discuss the many timely and worthy projects with my fellow jurors Eli Reed and Naveen Kishore," explained Michelle Dunn Marsh, Chair of this year's Smith Grant jury committee and a Smith Fund board member. "In fact, the quality of entries was so good that the judges needed to review entries over and over to finally reach a consensus as to which projects would be deemed as finalists."

"It is a great honor for us to be named a finalist of the W. Eugene Smith Fund Memorial Grant," said Amit Madheshiya who, along with collaborator Shirley Abraham, is a finalist. "The honor comes with a massive responsibility to pursue photography resonant with humanistic tradition. This support would enable us to create the work that shines the light, where injustices have been thriving in the dark," he added.

2022 Howard Chapnick Grant Finalists

  • Seydou Camara: "Educational Project for Visual and Citizenship Culture in Bamako" (Mali)
  • Ala Kheir: "Educational and Collaboration Project in Sudan" (Sudan)
  • Jessica Lim: "Angkor Photo Festival and Workshops" (Cambodia)
  • Raphaela Rosella: "Auto-ethnographic Project with Communities of Incarceration" (Australia)

"As adjudicators, we wanted to look at the Howard Chapnick grant not only as a grant for great proposals, but to evaluate how these proposals reflect career commitments," John Fleetwood, Chair of the Howard Chapnick Grant jury explained. "Those people who make photography happen and without whom we would not see the kind of work coming from many areas. Many of the great proposals submitted varied in scope and purpose; from research, education, project-based, participatory, online, festival, community, socio-political action, etc. This is so important as it speaks to photography's wide and diverse practices," he concluded.

"I'm grateful for any opportunity to amplify the work and voices of visual storytellers from Asia and I hope that this acknowledgement from the Howard Chapnick Grant will help further my efforts as I continue my work," said Jessica Lim, a Chapnick grant finalist based in Cambodia. "I also want to deeply thank the team behind the grant and the W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund for their invaluable and continued dedication to supporting photographers through such initiatives and I hope they will be able to continue do so well into the future."

2022 W. Eugene Smith Student Grant Finalists

  • Sumi Anjuman: "Hope Has Let the Light Remain" (Bangladesh)
  • Trent Bozeman: "The Mayor Left" (United States)
  • Mohamed Mahdy: "Here the Doors Don't Know Me" (Egypt)
  • Taniya Sarkar: "Nothing Left to Call Home" (India)

"There was a great range of approaches and meaningful commitments to social justice issues in the applications," Noelle Flores The[!]ard, chair of the jury, said. "All the finalists were incredibly thoughtful about how their photographic work impacted the individuals they photographed. Overall, we as the jury were heartened to see creative approaches to documentary storytelling and are very excited to see how these projects develop."

"Being named a finalist in the W. Eugene Smith Grant is undoubtedly very prestigious," commented Sumi Anjuman, a student finalist from Bangladesh. "At the same time, I believe this acknowledgement will motivate me immensely in my future endeavors."


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