
Lindokuhle Sobekwa said: “This is such a huge honour. I’ve looked up to the people who have received the Prize before so this is such a milestone. Given our times I think it’s such an important place to be a photographer and a storyteller in South Africa.”
The influential prize, in partnership with the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation, rewards artists and their projects recognised as having made the most significant contribution to international contemporary photography over the past 12 months.
Lindokuhle Sobekwa (b.1995, South Africa) was awarded the Prize for the book I carry Her photo with Me, published by MACK in 2024.
The deeply personal project began when Sobekwa found a family portrait with his older sister Ziyanda’s face cut out. He found the photograph in his mother’s bible and it remains the only photograph he has of his sister. One day when the siblings were seven and thirteen, she chased him and he was hit by a car and badly injured. Traumatised by the accident, Ziyanda disappeared hours later. She only returned a decade later, by which time she was very ill. In the intervening years, Sobekwa had become a photographer. When she came back, Sobekwa tried to take Ziyanda’s portrait, but stopped when she reacted angrily. Ziyanda died soon after.
I carry Her photo with Me documents Sobekwa’s photographic search for the life his sister had lived and the people she had met. Combining photographs, handwritten notes and family snapshots in this scrapbook-like publication, Sobekwa explores the memory of his sister, his family history and the wider implications of disappearances in South Africa. The work is part of his wider practice on fragmentation, poverty and the long-reaching ramifications of Apartheid and colonialism across all levels of South African society.
Shoair Mavlian, Director of The Photographers’ Gallery and Chair of the Jury, said: "We are delighted to announce Lindokuhle Sobekwa as the winner of the 2025 Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize. Lindokuhle powerfully uses photography as a way for him and his family to speak about their past, loss and memory, alongside the larger story and challenges of post-Apartheid South Africa. We hope his work is an inspiration to younger photographers and artists to create something powerful with simple production and impactful storytelling. It's been an honour to share Lindokuhle's work with our visitors over the last few months. Congratulations Lindokuhle.”
Anne-Marie Beckmann, Director of the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation, said: “Huge congratulations to Lindokuhle. With impactful rawness, his photobook I carry Her photo with Me shows the power of photography to move and connect us. Published by MACK, his photobook uses photography to create dialogue and poetically opens up questions about his family and his country. Deeply personal storytelling runs through the core of his work as he remembers his sister Ziyanda, and explores his family history, and the complexities of family relationships and dynamics. Congratulations too to the other shortlisted artists - Rahim Fortune, Cristina De Middel and Tarrah Krajnak. We have been thrilled to bring their work together in London for this year's Prize.”
The other shortlisted artists – Cristina De Middel, Rahim Fortune and Tarrah Krajnak – all received £5,000. The exhibition showcasing work by all four shortlisted artists is on show at The Photographers’ Gallery until 15 June 2025.
This year’s Jury are: Anne-Marie Beckmann (Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation), Gwen Lee (Co-founder Singapore International Photography Festival & Director DECK Photography Art Centre), Dana Lixenberg
(photographer and Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize shortlisted artist, 2017), Aron Mörel (publisher, Mörel Books) and Shoair Mavlian (The Photographers’ Gallery) as voting chair.
Lindokuhle Sobekwa said: “This is such a huge honour. I’ve looked up to the people who have received the Prize before so this is such a milestone. Given our times I think it’s such an important place to be a photographer and a storyteller in South Africa.”
The influential prize, in partnership with the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation, rewards artists and their projects recognised as having made the most significant contribution to international contemporary photography over the past 12 months.
Lindokuhle Sobekwa (b.1995, South Africa) was awarded the Prize for the book I carry Her photo with Me, published by MACK in 2024.
The deeply personal project began when Sobekwa found a family portrait with his older sister Ziyanda’s face cut out. He found the photograph in his mother’s bible and it remains the only photograph he has of his sister. One day when the siblings were seven and thirteen, she chased him and he was hit by a car and badly injured. Traumatised by the accident, Ziyanda disappeared hours later. She only returned a decade later, by which time she was very ill. In the intervening years, Sobekwa had become a photographer. When she came back, Sobekwa tried to take Ziyanda’s portrait, but stopped when she reacted angrily. Ziyanda died soon after.
I carry Her photo with Me documents Sobekwa’s photographic search for the life his sister had lived and the people she had met. Combining photographs, handwritten notes and family snapshots in this scrapbook-like publication, Sobekwa explores the memory of his sister, his family history and the wider implications of disappearances in South Africa. The work is part of his wider practice on fragmentation, poverty and the long-reaching ramifications of Apartheid and colonialism across all levels of South African society.
Shoair Mavlian, Director of The Photographers’ Gallery and Chair of the Jury, said: "We are delighted to announce Lindokuhle Sobekwa as the winner of the 2025 Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize. Lindokuhle powerfully uses photography as a way for him and his family to speak about their past, loss and memory, alongside the larger story and challenges of post-Apartheid South Africa. We hope his work is an inspiration to younger photographers and artists to create something powerful with simple production and impactful storytelling. It's been an honour to share Lindokuhle's work with our visitors over the last few months. Congratulations Lindokuhle.”
Anne-Marie Beckmann, Director of the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation, said: “Huge congratulations to Lindokuhle. With impactful rawness, his photobook I carry Her photo with Me shows the power of photography to move and connect us. Published by MACK, his photobook uses photography to create dialogue and poetically opens up questions about his family and his country. Deeply personal storytelling runs through the core of his work as he remembers his sister Ziyanda, and explores his family history, and the complexities of family relationships and dynamics. Congratulations too to the other shortlisted artists - Rahim Fortune, Cristina De Middel and Tarrah Krajnak. We have been thrilled to bring their work together in London for this year's Prize.”
The other shortlisted artists – Cristina De Middel, Rahim Fortune and Tarrah Krajnak – all received £5,000. The exhibition showcasing work by all four shortlisted artists is on show at The Photographers’ Gallery until 15 June 2025.
This year’s Jury are: Anne-Marie Beckmann (Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation), Gwen Lee (Co-founder Singapore International Photography Festival & Director DECK Photography Art Centre), Dana Lixenberg
(photographer and Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize shortlisted artist, 2017), Aron Mörel (publisher, Mörel Books) and Shoair Mavlian (The Photographers’ Gallery) as voting chair.
Lindokuhle Sobekwa said: “This is such a huge honour. I’ve looked up to the people who have received the Prize before so this is such a milestone. Given our times I think it’s such an important place to be a photographer and a storyteller in South Africa.”
The influential prize, in partnership with the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation, rewards artists and their projects recognised as having made the most significant contribution to international contemporary photography over the past 12 months.
Lindokuhle Sobekwa (b.1995, South Africa) was awarded the Prize for the book I carry Her photo with Me, published by MACK in 2024.
The deeply personal project began when Sobekwa found a family portrait with his older sister Ziyanda’s face cut out. He found the photograph in his mother’s bible and it remains the only photograph he has of his sister. One day when the siblings were seven and thirteen, she chased him and he was hit by a car and badly injured. Traumatised by the accident, Ziyanda disappeared hours later. She only returned a decade later, by which time she was very ill. In the intervening years, Sobekwa had become a photographer. When she came back, Sobekwa tried to take Ziyanda’s portrait, but stopped when she reacted angrily. Ziyanda died soon after.
I carry Her photo with Me documents Sobekwa’s photographic search for the life his sister had lived and the people she had met. Combining photographs, handwritten notes and family snapshots in this scrapbook-like publication, Sobekwa explores the memory of his sister, his family history and the wider implications of disappearances in South Africa. The work is part of his wider practice on fragmentation, poverty and the long-reaching ramifications of Apartheid and colonialism across all levels of South African society.
Shoair Mavlian, Director of The Photographers’ Gallery and Chair of the Jury, said: "We are delighted to announce Lindokuhle Sobekwa as the winner of the 2025 Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize. Lindokuhle powerfully uses photography as a way for him and his family to speak about their past, loss and memory, alongside the larger story and challenges of post-Apartheid South Africa. We hope his work is an inspiration to younger photographers and artists to create something powerful with simple production and impactful storytelling. It's been an honour to share Lindokuhle's work with our visitors over the last few months. Congratulations Lindokuhle.”
Anne-Marie Beckmann, Director of the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation, said: “Huge congratulations to Lindokuhle. With impactful rawness, his photobook I carry Her photo with Me shows the power of photography to move and connect us. Published by MACK, his photobook uses photography to create dialogue and poetically opens up questions about his family and his country. Deeply personal storytelling runs through the core of his work as he remembers his sister Ziyanda, and explores his family history, and the complexities of family relationships and dynamics. Congratulations too to the other shortlisted artists - Rahim Fortune, Cristina De Middel and Tarrah Krajnak. We have been thrilled to bring their work together in London for this year's Prize.”
The other shortlisted artists – Cristina De Middel, Rahim Fortune and Tarrah Krajnak – all received £5,000. The exhibition showcasing work by all four shortlisted artists is on show at The Photographers’ Gallery until 15 June 2025.
This year’s Jury are: Anne-Marie Beckmann (Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation), Gwen Lee (Co-founder Singapore International Photography Festival & Director DECK Photography Art Centre), Dana Lixenberg
(photographer and Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize shortlisted artist, 2017), Aron Mörel (publisher, Mörel Books) and Shoair Mavlian (The Photographers’ Gallery) as voting chair.