Prix Pictet Fire opens in Zürich

The bodies of work shortlisted for Prix Pictet Fire draw their inspiration from both major global events and personal experiences.

Words by

Prix Pictet

© Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, WONDER BEIRUT, The story of a Pyromaniac Photographer, 1998-2006. From the series: Wonder Beirut, 1998-2006 Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, In Situ Fabienne Leclerc, Paris, The Third Line, Dubai, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artists, In Situ Fabienne Leclerc and The Third Line

The Prix Pictet aims to harness the power of photography – all genres of photography – to draw global attention to issues of sustainability, especially those concerning the environment. PrixPictet Fire, the ninth cycle of the Prix Pictet, presents work by 13 photographers from Austria,Belgium, Benin, Cambodia, Japan, Lebanon, Mexico, Nigeria, South Africa, Switzerland, USA who have been shortlisted for this year's prize.

© David Uzochukwu | Wildfire, 2015. From the series: In The Wake, 2015-2020   David Uzochukwu, Galerie Number 8, Brussels, Prix Pictet.Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Number 8

The bodies of work shortlisted for Prix Pictet Fire draw their inspiration from both major global events and personal experiences. The photographic images span documentary, portraiture,landscape, collage and studies of light and process. The winner of Prix Pictet Fire is the American photographer Sally Mann who was presented with the award in December 2021 at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum for her series Blackwater (2008-2012).

© Mak Remissa | My grandmother assisted her sick husband to walk, 2014.From the series: Left 3 Days, 2014   Mak Remissa, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artist
© Sally Mann | Blackwater 13, 2008-2012. From the series: Blackwater,2008-2012   Sally Mann, Gagosian, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artistand Gagosian

Blackwater (2008-2012) is a multifaceted exploration of the devastating wildfires that enveloped the Great Dismal Swamp in southeastern Virginia, where the first slave ships docked in America. In this work, Mann draws a parallel between the all-consuming wildfires she encountered there with racial conflict in America, explaining “The fires in the Great Dismal Swamp seemed to epitomize the great fire of racial strife in America – the Civil War, emancipation, the Civil Rights Movement, in which my family was involved, the racial unrest of the late 1960s and most recently the summer of 2020. Something about the deeply flawed American character seems to embrace the apocalyptic as solution.”

© Brent Stirton |  From the series: Burns Capital Of The World, 2013  Brent Stirton, Getty Images, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artist and Getty images

Prix Pictet Fire features other established photographers including Rinko Kawauchi who photographed firework displays throughout Japan every summer from 1997-2001 and Christian Marclay whose series of photographic prints that began as small-scale collages featuring fragments from comic books, movie stills and images found on the internet. They are joined by young and emerging names in photography, including David Uzochukwu, whose portraiture series In The Wake is set within an unknown landscape on fire, and Fabrice Monteiro, whose series The Prophecy addresses worldwide pollution through staged photographs of figures in costumes made of trash and natural materials.

The shortlisted photographers are:

Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige (Lebanon)
Rinko Kawauchi (Japan)
Sally Mann (USA)
Christian Marclay (USA/ Switzerland)
Fabrice Monteiro (Belgium/Benin)
Lisa Oppenheim (USA)
Mak Remissa (Cambodia)
Carla Rippey (Mexico)
Mark Ruwedel (USA)
Brent Stirton (South Africa)
David Uzochukwu (Austria/Nigeria)
Daisuke Yokota (Japan)

PRIX PICTET FIRE
4 – 27 February 2022
Luma Westbau, Zurich

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Prix Pictet Fire opens in Zürich

The bodies of work shortlisted for Prix Pictet Fire draw their inspiration from both major global events and personal experiences.

Words by

Prix Pictet

The bodies of work shortlisted for Prix Pictet Fire draw their inspiration from both major global events and personal experiences.
© Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, WONDER BEIRUT, The story of a Pyromaniac Photographer, 1998-2006. From the series: Wonder Beirut, 1998-2006 Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, In Situ Fabienne Leclerc, Paris, The Third Line, Dubai, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artists, In Situ Fabienne Leclerc and The Third Line

The Prix Pictet aims to harness the power of photography – all genres of photography – to draw global attention to issues of sustainability, especially those concerning the environment. PrixPictet Fire, the ninth cycle of the Prix Pictet, presents work by 13 photographers from Austria,Belgium, Benin, Cambodia, Japan, Lebanon, Mexico, Nigeria, South Africa, Switzerland, USA who have been shortlisted for this year's prize.

© David Uzochukwu | Wildfire, 2015. From the series: In The Wake, 2015-2020   David Uzochukwu, Galerie Number 8, Brussels, Prix Pictet.Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Number 8

The bodies of work shortlisted for Prix Pictet Fire draw their inspiration from both major global events and personal experiences. The photographic images span documentary, portraiture,landscape, collage and studies of light and process. The winner of Prix Pictet Fire is the American photographer Sally Mann who was presented with the award in December 2021 at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum for her series Blackwater (2008-2012).

© Mak Remissa | My grandmother assisted her sick husband to walk, 2014.From the series: Left 3 Days, 2014   Mak Remissa, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artist
© Sally Mann | Blackwater 13, 2008-2012. From the series: Blackwater,2008-2012   Sally Mann, Gagosian, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artistand Gagosian

Blackwater (2008-2012) is a multifaceted exploration of the devastating wildfires that enveloped the Great Dismal Swamp in southeastern Virginia, where the first slave ships docked in America. In this work, Mann draws a parallel between the all-consuming wildfires she encountered there with racial conflict in America, explaining “The fires in the Great Dismal Swamp seemed to epitomize the great fire of racial strife in America – the Civil War, emancipation, the Civil Rights Movement, in which my family was involved, the racial unrest of the late 1960s and most recently the summer of 2020. Something about the deeply flawed American character seems to embrace the apocalyptic as solution.”

© Brent Stirton |  From the series: Burns Capital Of The World, 2013  Brent Stirton, Getty Images, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artist and Getty images

Prix Pictet Fire features other established photographers including Rinko Kawauchi who photographed firework displays throughout Japan every summer from 1997-2001 and Christian Marclay whose series of photographic prints that began as small-scale collages featuring fragments from comic books, movie stills and images found on the internet. They are joined by young and emerging names in photography, including David Uzochukwu, whose portraiture series In The Wake is set within an unknown landscape on fire, and Fabrice Monteiro, whose series The Prophecy addresses worldwide pollution through staged photographs of figures in costumes made of trash and natural materials.

The shortlisted photographers are:

Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige (Lebanon)
Rinko Kawauchi (Japan)
Sally Mann (USA)
Christian Marclay (USA/ Switzerland)
Fabrice Monteiro (Belgium/Benin)
Lisa Oppenheim (USA)
Mak Remissa (Cambodia)
Carla Rippey (Mexico)
Mark Ruwedel (USA)
Brent Stirton (South Africa)
David Uzochukwu (Austria/Nigeria)
Daisuke Yokota (Japan)

PRIX PICTET FIRE
4 – 27 February 2022
Luma Westbau, Zurich

Prix Pictet Fire opens in Zürich

The bodies of work shortlisted for Prix Pictet Fire draw their inspiration from both major global events and personal experiences.

Words by

Prix Pictet

Prix Pictet Fire opens in Zürich
© Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, WONDER BEIRUT, The story of a Pyromaniac Photographer, 1998-2006. From the series: Wonder Beirut, 1998-2006 Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, In Situ Fabienne Leclerc, Paris, The Third Line, Dubai, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artists, In Situ Fabienne Leclerc and The Third Line

The Prix Pictet aims to harness the power of photography – all genres of photography – to draw global attention to issues of sustainability, especially those concerning the environment. PrixPictet Fire, the ninth cycle of the Prix Pictet, presents work by 13 photographers from Austria,Belgium, Benin, Cambodia, Japan, Lebanon, Mexico, Nigeria, South Africa, Switzerland, USA who have been shortlisted for this year's prize.

© David Uzochukwu | Wildfire, 2015. From the series: In The Wake, 2015-2020   David Uzochukwu, Galerie Number 8, Brussels, Prix Pictet.Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Number 8

The bodies of work shortlisted for Prix Pictet Fire draw their inspiration from both major global events and personal experiences. The photographic images span documentary, portraiture,landscape, collage and studies of light and process. The winner of Prix Pictet Fire is the American photographer Sally Mann who was presented with the award in December 2021 at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum for her series Blackwater (2008-2012).

© Mak Remissa | My grandmother assisted her sick husband to walk, 2014.From the series: Left 3 Days, 2014   Mak Remissa, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artist
© Sally Mann | Blackwater 13, 2008-2012. From the series: Blackwater,2008-2012   Sally Mann, Gagosian, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artistand Gagosian

Blackwater (2008-2012) is a multifaceted exploration of the devastating wildfires that enveloped the Great Dismal Swamp in southeastern Virginia, where the first slave ships docked in America. In this work, Mann draws a parallel between the all-consuming wildfires she encountered there with racial conflict in America, explaining “The fires in the Great Dismal Swamp seemed to epitomize the great fire of racial strife in America – the Civil War, emancipation, the Civil Rights Movement, in which my family was involved, the racial unrest of the late 1960s and most recently the summer of 2020. Something about the deeply flawed American character seems to embrace the apocalyptic as solution.”

© Brent Stirton |  From the series: Burns Capital Of The World, 2013  Brent Stirton, Getty Images, Prix Pictet. Courtesy of the artist and Getty images

Prix Pictet Fire features other established photographers including Rinko Kawauchi who photographed firework displays throughout Japan every summer from 1997-2001 and Christian Marclay whose series of photographic prints that began as small-scale collages featuring fragments from comic books, movie stills and images found on the internet. They are joined by young and emerging names in photography, including David Uzochukwu, whose portraiture series In The Wake is set within an unknown landscape on fire, and Fabrice Monteiro, whose series The Prophecy addresses worldwide pollution through staged photographs of figures in costumes made of trash and natural materials.

The shortlisted photographers are:

Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige (Lebanon)
Rinko Kawauchi (Japan)
Sally Mann (USA)
Christian Marclay (USA/ Switzerland)
Fabrice Monteiro (Belgium/Benin)
Lisa Oppenheim (USA)
Mak Remissa (Cambodia)
Carla Rippey (Mexico)
Mark Ruwedel (USA)
Brent Stirton (South Africa)
David Uzochukwu (Austria/Nigeria)
Daisuke Yokota (Japan)

PRIX PICTET FIRE
4 – 27 February 2022
Luma Westbau, Zurich

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