Photography can make visible scenes that never existed outside the photographer’s imagination, providing artists with the ability to share dreams, fabricate stories, and delve into self-reflection. For this exhibition, we seek images that bring us into your world of dreams and fantasies. All captures and processes welcome.
We are very pleased to welcome back Susan Burnstine to jury this exhibit. She will select approximately 35 images for exhibition in our Middlebury, Vermont gallery, and an additional 35 images for our Online Gallery Annex. All 70 selected imaged will appear in the exhibition catalog.
The Juror’s Award and Director’s Award recipients will be entitled to a portfolio review with the juror.
The Juror’s Award and Director’s Award recipients will be entitled to a portfolio review with the juror.
Submissions: $39 for up to 5 images, $6 each additional image.
Find complete information about submitting images here.
Information about our printing service and free matting and framing here.
Susan Burnstine is an award-winning fine art photographer originally from Chicago, now based in Los Angeles. Represented by galleries around the world and widely published across the globe, she also conducts workshops internationally and has written for numerous photography publications, including a monthly column for Black and White Photography magazine (UK).
Burnstine has had over 30 solo exhibits internationally and her work is held in numerous museum and private collections. She’s published two award-winning monographs: Within Shadows (Charta Editions, 2011) and Absence of Being (Damiani, 2016)
WHAT WE DO
PhotoPlace Gallery offers monthly, juried photographic exhibitions to photographers worldwide, each with a new topic and internationally recognized juror.
Juror selections are exhibited in either our physical gallery in Middlebury, Vermont or in our Online gallery on our website. All past exhibitions remain permanently posted on the website.
We encourage creative interpretation of our themes. Images do need to relate to the theme, but they need not be entirely literal.