Archive for the ‘MFA’ Category

OPENING TOMORROW: Fringe Economies: Sarina Finkelstein & Maureen Drennan at the Newspace Center for Photography

Thursday, May 5th, 2011

Fringe Economies

Sarina Finkelstein & Maureen Drennan

May 6th – 29th
Opening Reception: Friday, May 6th 6-9pm
Artist Lecture: Saturday, May 7th 1pm


Maureen Drennan, Adam, 2008

My friend and fellow SVA Alum, Maureen Drennan is in a two person show at the Newspace Center for Photography in Portland, OR. I had the pleasure of watching this body of work develop. It is a fascinating series and quite a relevant body of work to show on the west coast. If you are around be sure to get out there and see the opening and artist lecture.

from the press release:

MAUREEN DRENNAN

Maureen Drennan will be presenting work from her series “Meet Me in the Green Glen.” The series documents the life of Ben, a marijuana farmer in California. Though it is legal to grow marijuana in California, it is still an activity that carries heavy social and political stigma. Drennan’s photographs of Ben’s life, his lands, and his plants is an intimate look at a seldom seen lifestyle.

Maureen Drennan is a photographer born and based in New York City. Since receiving her MFA in photography from the School of Visual Arts in 2009, her photographs have been included in numerous group exhibitions including the Chelsea Art Museum, New York City, Silvereye Center for Photography, Pittsburg and Rayko Gallery, San Francisco. Maureen has received honors from Aperture, The Photo Review, PDN, The Photographic Resource Center of Boston, Humble Arts, and Artist as Citizen. Her photographs were included in The Collector’ s Guide to New Art Photography, Volume 2. Maureen currently teaches photography at the City University of New York.

www.maureendrennan.net

SARINA FINKELSTEIN

Sarina Finkelstein will be presenting work from her series “The New 49ers.” The series is an investigation of the re-emergence of gold prospectors in California. The New 49ers are recently laid-off workers, veterans, retirees, ex-convicts and freelancers in between gigs—all dependent on the income they derive from gold prospecting. Finkelstein’s project draws a comparison between the original Gold Rush, the lesser-known surge of gold prospecting during the Great Depression of the 1930’s and the modern-day wave of gold prospectors in California during the Great Recession.

Sarina Finkelstein earned her BFA from Washington University and her MFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York. Her work has been featured as the cover story forThe Daily, in SEVEN, and on TIME.com and NPR.org. She has been a guest speaker for Professional Women Photographers and a speaker and award recipient at the Society for Photographic Education National Conference. Finkelstein lives in New York.

www.sarinafinkelstein.com

OPENING TONIGHT: Debbie Grossman’s My Pie Town at Julie Saul Gallery.

Thursday, April 14th, 2011


Debbie Grossman, My Pie Town “Jessie Evans-Whinery, homesteader, with her wife Edith Evans-Whinery and their baby.” 2009-10, 10 1/2 x 14 inches

Tonight is the opening for friend and fellow SVA Alum, Debbie Grossman’s project, My Pie Town. I really enjoyed her project when I first saw it at the MFA Thesis show. They popped up again at Pulse in Miami this past winter. I’m looking forward to seeing the collection of images together. The project does a good job of combining appropriated images with a seamless Photoshop collaging that results in a interesting new narrative. Also, in conjunction with the show the gallery has published a monograph of My Pie Town in an edition 100.

Statement:
My Pie Town is a project by Debbie Grossman in which she reworks and re-imagines a body of images originally photographed by Russell Lee for the United States Farm Security Administration in 1940. Using Photoshop to modify Lee’s pictures, she created an imaginary, parallel world – a Pie Town populated exclusively by women. The images are revised in subtle ways, making the reading of them very complicated and compelling. The sixteen images in the series are both color and black and white, and are all based on Lee’s unpublished series on Pietown, a homesteaded community in New Mexico.

The original photographs are available either through the Library of Congress or through the Web. Grossman says of the project “I’ve begun to think of Photoshop as my medium – I’m fascinated by the fact this it shares qualities with both photography and drawing…..I enjoy imagining My Pie Town working as its own kind of (lighthearted) propaganda”.

In conjunction with the show, the gallery is publishing a small monograph of My Pie Town in a limited edition 100 copies.

Debbie Grossman
My Pie Town
April 14-May 21, 2011
further information

For further information contact the gallery

 

Also opening at Julie Saul Gallery tonight:

Jeff Whetstone
Seducing Birds, Snakes, Men
April 14-May 21, 2011
further information

OPENING: 2010 SVA MFA Photo, Video & Related Media – THESIS EXHIBITION

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

It’s hard to believe that a year ago was my SVA MFA Thesis show. Tonight is the opening for this year’s crop of artists. I’m looking forward to seeing how their work developed over their Thesis year of school.

Hopefully, I’ll see you at the show tonight. Also, be sure to check out this year’s Thesis web site at: http://mfaphoto.schoolofvisualarts.edu/thesis2010/index.php

This years’ thesis exhibition features the work of:

IRENE BERMUDEZ
ŽELJKA BLAKŠIĆ
LORNE BLYTHE
JOHN CYR
BEATRIZ DIAZ
JOHN DUNWOODY
NATAN DVIR
JANOSCH PARKER
MARTHA FLEMING-IVES
J.A. FOLKS
ROBERT GILL
EUGENE GOLOGURSKY
KATE GREENBERG
DEBBIE GROSSMAN
STONE KIM
TAMAR LATZMAN
VIVIAN LEE
ELIZABETH LIBERT
DINA LITOVSKY
JOHN A. MESSINGER
LAURA OBERG
ALLYSON ROSS
SELENA SALFEN
ANDREA SANTOLAYA
LEIGH WELLS

June 11th-26th

Opening Reception
Tuesday, June 15th
6-8pm

Gallery Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 10AM-5PM

Visual Arts Gallery
601 W 26h Street, Suite 1502
New York, NY
View Map

Our awkward program name – photography, video, and related media – is becoming ever more apt. This year, the thesis show includes photographic prints, videos, multi-media installations, sculpture and oil paintings. With the swift advance of digital technology, students are using still or moving images merely as points of departure to invent a wide array of forms. Željka Blaskic, for example, produces a five-channel video installation inspired by her childhood in war-torn Croatia. Jan Ebeling (aka Janosch Parker) commissions oil paintings based on photographs of his witty performances. Irene Bermudez combines projected images, freestanding sculpture and a neon sign to create an immersive environment meant to evoke bodily sensations. Allyson Ross creates sculptural reliefs devoid of color based on iconic nineteenth-century photographs of Yosemite National Park. And John Messinger installs a small historical exhibit based on the life of a homeless man. These results and others are exciting to behold and, I confess, daunting for a curator trying to make visual or conceptual order from it all.

If there is an overall trend, it is the trust that students place in personal experience. Robert Gill, for example, embraces the obsession with fitness in our culture. Selena Salfen explores the crushing effects of post-traumatic stress disorder through the history of her own family. Tamar Latzman investigates themes from Jewish-European history by inventing memories of dreams and performing them for the camera. And Laura Oberg explores race in America by interviewing members of her mixed-race family. It may be that the confessional turn of our culture – much enhanced by social networking media – explains the willingness of students to reveal themselves in their work. But the students are not self-centered; they look inward in order to look outward. Growing up with the caveats of identity politics and challenges to the objectivity of representation, our students no longer feel at home with the relatively simple norms of documentary or straight photography. Instead, each student invents a new strategy for using images to make art.

–Bonnie Yochelson Curator

Tonight, Opening: Johanna Heldebro: To Come Within Reach of You

Friday, December 18th, 2009


Johanna Heldebro, “Night Watch chapter 4 excerpt,” 2009

2009 Fall Solo Show Artist
Johanna Heldebro Presents

To Come Within Reach of You
December 18, 7 to 10 p, Free Admission & Drinks

Johanna Heldebro presents images and video documenting the daily life of her father, who disappeared from her life two years prior. After searching his name on the internet, Heldebro travels to Stockholm, Sweden to obsessively follow him, creating a series that refigures comfortable notions of adult identity. Join us for this compelling body of work that is at time as coldly detached as it is uncomfortably personal.

Complimentary Bear Flag Wine & Colt 45. Music from DJ Tanner.

RSVP events@3rdward.com

On display through December 27.

More images from Johanna Heldebro’s series:


Johanna Heldebro, “Finding My Way Inside chapter 2 excerpt,” 2009


Johanna Heldebro, “Finding My Way Inside chapter 2 excerpt,” 2009


Johanna Heldebro, “Autonomy chapter 5 excerpt,” 2009

Dueling Lectures, September 17, 2009

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

There are at least 3 competing Lectures tonight. They are all battling for me to attend who will win…

In this corner, the Chairman of the MFA Photography, Video and Related Media at School of Visual Arts


Burlington, VT, 1990, Pigment print. Copyright Charles H. Traub, Courtesy Gitterman Gallery

Charles Traub
The Camera Club of New York Lecture series.

Thursday, September 17th 7pm
The School of Visual Arts Amphitheatre
209 E. 23rd Street (2nd and 3rd avenues), 3rd Floor
(please bring photo ID)

Book signing and sale to follow the lecture.

Free to CCNY members, SVA students, faculty, and staff
General admission $10, $5 for other students with valid student ID

Charles Traub will be speaking about two of his projects: In the Still Life, his most recent book; and his forthcoming one, Still Life in America: Looking at US. He describes his work as such, ”Real world witness is my concern and for one such as me, the road and the street are the muse. Whether standing on the street corner or on the road trip, it is the great irony and humor inherent in the human condition. To record such is the great delight of my life.“

Mr. Traub is Chair of MFA Photography, Video and Related Media, School of Visual Arts in New York City, the largest independent college of art in the United States. He holds an MS from the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology and a BA degree from the University of Illinois. He was formerly the director of the prestigious Light Gallery of New York. He is President of the Aaron Siskind Foundation for support of creative photography. He is one of the co founders of Here is New York, a Democracy of Photographs, which received the Brendan Gill Award of the Municipal Arts Society, Cornell Capa Infinity Award, and a Distinguished Service Award from the Children‘s Aid Society of New York. He has had numerous one-person exhibitions including Marcus Pfeifer Gallery, Van Straaten Gallery, Art Directors Guild of New York, Chicago Center for Contemporary Photography, the Art Institute of Chicago, The Light Gallery and the Hudson River Museum. His work is currently represented by the Tom Gitterman Gallery in New York. Mr. Traub has authored and edited many books including Beach, Italy Observed, and Angler‘s Album, and has had his work published in Connoisseur, Fortune, Newsweek, U.S. News and World Report, American Photographer, Popular Photography, Aperture, and Afterimage. He has received awards from the New York State Council on the Arts, Hendrecks Foundation, Illinois Art Council, Manda Foundation, Olympics Arts Organization Committee, and the Mary McDowell Center for Learning. His textbook In the Realm of Circuit was published by Prentice Hall in the spring of 2003. In the Still Life, a monograph of his recent color photography, was published in September 2004. He recently co-edited the book Education of a Photographer.

And in this corner…

Words Without Pictures presents

Confounding Expectations VI: Photography in Context

Thursday, September 17, 2009 7 pm

FREE Admission

Tishman Auditorium
66 West 12th Street, New York City

Seating is on a first-come, first-serve basis

This first event celebrates the launch of the innovative Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) book project Words Without Pictures, which documents roughly one year of conversations about the most pressing issues shaping contemporary photography.

Moderator:

CHARLOTTE COTTON is the Curator and Head of the Wallis Annenberg Photography Department at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Previously, she was the Curator of Photographs at the Victoria and Albert Museum (1992-2004). She is the author and editor of books, including Imperfect Beauty: the making of contemporary fashion photographs (2000), and The Photograph as Contemporary Art (2004). Charlotte will be returning to London later in the fall to take up a new position of creative director of the London space of the National Media Museum, which will open in 2012.

Panelists:

DENISE WOLFF is a photobook editor, known for her work with both contemporary and historic photography. She recently joined Aperture from Phaidon Press. Throughout her career, she has had the opportunity to work on many beautiful books with the world’s top photographers, including Mary Ellen Mark, Martin Parr, Eugene Richards, and Stephen Shore to name a few.

MATT KEEGAN is an artist based in Brooklyn, N.Y. His work has been exhibited at venues such as Altman Siegel Gallery, San Francisco; Midway Contemporary Art, Minneapolis; Anna Helwing Gallery, Los Angeles; D’Amelio Terras, New York; White Columns, New York; and Wallspace Gallery, New York in collaboration with Leslie Hewitt. He is co-founder and publisher of the annual publication North Drive Press.

ALEX KLEIN is an artist based in Los Angeles and the editor of Words Without Pictures. In Spring 2007, she co-organized with James Welling the conference Around Photography at the Hammer Museum. She is currently the Ralph M. Parsons Curatorial Fellow in the Wallis Annenberg Photography Department at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and an adjunct faculty member at the USC Roski School of Fine Arts.

With special guests Fia Backstrom, Johanna Burton, Melissa Catanese, Sarah Charlesworth, Moyra Davey, Darius Himes, John Lehr, Miranda Lichtenstein, Arthur Ou, Ed Panar and Laurel Ptak.

The lecture series is presented with generous support from the Kettering Family Foundation and the Henry Nias Foundation. The program is made possible in part by public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.

More info at the New School website here

And lastly,

At the SVA Theatre

Dave Hickey: The God Ennui

Thursday, September 17, 7pm

Writer and educator Dave Hickey is the author of two highly regarded collections of critical essays, The Invisible Dragon: Four Essays on Beauty (Art Issues Press, 1993); Air Guitar: Essays on Art and Democracy (Art Issues Press, 1998) and the forthcoming Pagan America (Simon and Schuster, 2010). He was the recipient of a 2001 MacArthur Fellowship, and is currently Schaeffer Professor of Modern Letters at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. Presented by the MFA Art Criticism and Writing Department.

SVA Theatre, 333 West 23 Street
Free and open to the public

Who will win my attention? I don’t even know yet!

Although afterwards I will surly be trying to attend this Blind Spot related event:

From SLRs to disposables to digital cameras to PDAs, the photographic image is more prolific than at any point since the medium’

Rizzoli International and Ken Miller invite you to join us in celebrating
the publication of

SHOOT
@
New Museum of Contemporary Art
Thursday September 17, 7-9pm

SHOOT is a collection of ‘photography of the moment’ by Stephen Shore, Nan
Goldin, Walter Pfeiffer, Boris Mikhailov, Wolfgang Tillmans, Juergen
Teller, Mark Borthwick, Ari Marcopoulos, Hiromix, Glynnis McDaris, Linus
Bill, Jason Nocito, Yurie Nagashima, Tim Barber, Peter Sutherland, JH
Engstrom, Dash Snow, Kenneth Cappello, Louise Enhorning, Michael
Schmelling, Nacho Alegre, Ola Rindal, Paul Schiek, Madi Ju, Jaimie Warren
and Thomas Jeppe.

“From SLRs to disposables to digital cameras to PDAs, the photographic
image is more prolific than at any point since the medium’s inception.
Whether working in personal documentary, editorial, fine art or fashion,
the photographers in SHOOT share a democratic, emotionally intuitive
approach to picture-taking that reflects an era in which we increasingly
use ephemeral images to define our own lives.”

SHOOT includes a foreword by legendary photographer Stephen Shore, in
addition to a critical essay by professor Penny Martin (of pioneering
fashion site SHOWstudio.com and the London College of Fashion) with a
historical overview by editor Ken Miller (Revisionaries; A Decade of Art in
Tokion).

And it’s over…

Thursday, July 16th, 2009


© 2008 Bert Rodriguez. The End-A project installed during the Whitney Biannual. As someone passes through the opening doors of the elevator a motion sensor triggers an endless looping soundtrack. The soundtrack was designed by the artist created from sections of end theme music from films. As the artist sees newer movies, more music is added until his death when the soundtrack will become completed.

Well, It’s the end of many things now for me. School is finished. The Thesis Exhibition is down. And Summer access to the School’s Computer Lab and printers is also over because they are renovating many parts of the school. So, we are now officially locked out from using the lab like we did last year to work on summer projects.

For now like so many photographers in New York I will be using Print Space when I need to make a work print or scan some film. While it is surreal that School is finished – with the end of school brings the excitement of the challenges ahead. It’s terrifying graduating now but at least the economy appears to be getting better. If I had graduated last year we would have been flying into the job market as the economy entered the worst collapse since the great depression. Hopefully, that is behind us and jobs will be coming back to all the working photographers and artists. And collectors will begin to buy more of the art that they enjoy. Go stock market go!

I’m really happy with how our Thesis Exhibition turned out. It was sad to bring home the work but the end also means new beginnings for me and the development of the series. Check out all the great blog love we got below. Thanks to all the bloggers who posted the information for the show or posted links to their favorite artists.

Press from the SVA MFA 2009 Thesis Exhibition
whats the jackanory ? – sva mfa show
Two Days Left for SVA MFA ’09 Show | Gallery Hopper
ArtCat – Chelsea – SVA (West 26th) – MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department presents Thesis Exhibition
Hey, Hot Shot! – SVA MFA 2009 Thesis Show
SVA (West 26th): MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department presents Thesis Exhibition | .FILAS, n{e}ws
Recent MFA Shows’ Selections. | digressions: a blog
Zoe Strauss: SVA MFA Photo Thesis Exhibition
wan.der.lust.ag.ra.phy
Schauraum 3 – thesis show at the FH Dortmund « Daniel on photography
SVA.MFA. « Prison Photography
ARTmostfierce: SVA 2009 MFA Thesis Exhibition
The Exposure Project: Jessica Bruah’s No Lake This Summer
Tina Schula – Conscientious
Maureen Drennan – Conscientious
Carlos Alvarez Montero – Conscientious
i heart photograph: yiftach belsky
School of Visual Arts MFA Photography and Related Media Thesis Exhibition | Artis

As for this blog I hope to keep it up. I have been thinking about what it should morph into now that school is out. I will be experimenting with taking some of the papers I have written in school and turning them into long blog posts. If they work I will continue to write longer articles on art in this blog in the future. So, to recap, an end is sad but the beginning is terrifyingly exciting. To quote my favorite wordsmith:


“What is that feeling when you’re driving away from people and they recede on the plain till you see their specks dispersing?–it’s the too- huge world vaulting us, and it’s good-by. But we lean forward to the next crazy venture beneath the skies.” -Jack Kerouac

Tonight, Opening of the MFA show.

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Looking forward to seeing you at the show.

SVA MFA Photo Thesis Exhibition

Opening tonight, Tuesday, June 16, 2009
6:00 – 8:00 pm

Visual Arts Gallery
601 West 26th Street, 15th Floor
New York, NY

The show also continues through June 27th if you can’t make it out tonight.

and you can always view the works in the show here:
http://mfaphoto.schoolofvisualarts.edu/thesis2009/index.php

School of Visual Arts Thesis 2009 Exhibition and website

Monday, June 15th, 2009


The Phantom Brigade,’ 20 x 37 inches, 2008

It’s been a long road these past two years at SVA. Tomorrow brings the end of a chapter and the beginning of a new one. Tuesday night from 6 – 8 pm is the School of Visual Arts MFA Photography, Video, and Related Media thesis exhibition.

I will be showing a set of five images from my series, Imaginary Wars. If you can’t make it, I have updated my website with a set of six images and detail shots: here.

Be sure to check out the strong work from my collogues of the class of 2009 online as well:

http://mfaphoto.schoolofvisualarts.edu/thesis2009/index.php

Thesis Exhibition, June 12 — 27, 2009
Opening Reception: Tuesday, June 16, 6 — 8 pm

Visual Arts Gallery
601 West 26 Street, Suite 1502
Monday — Thursday 10 am — 6 pm
Friday 10 am — 5 pm
Saturday 10 am — 6 pm

Thesis Video Screening, Wednesday, June 17, 2009 7 — 10 pm
SVA Theatre 333 West 23 Street

Graduation! and tips on how to launch your careers…

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

Graduation is tomorrow. I can’t believe it. what a whirl wind it has been. I will be posting more about the experience but for now I have a few links that see really useful for everyone graduating their MFA and entering the creative class. So, If your not going to date your art star professor then there are other avenues to finding your way.

Mrs. Deane has a nice post “susanne ludwig & how photographers launch their careers

Blogger and gallerist Edward Winkleman of the Winkleman Gallery. Has an ongoing series of useful smart posts on Getting a Gallery
How to Do Your Homework, Part I
How to Do Your Homework, Part II
Baseline Issues for the “How to Get a Gallery” Question
Advice for Artists Seeking Gallery Representation
One More Time, With Feeling (seriously)

I’ll update this post with more links as I come across them. Send me links if you have any suggestions.

NYPHA’09 Nominations

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

I am happy to say I have been included it the large list of Nominations for the 2009 New York Photo Awards. I have been accepted into two categories, Advertising Series for my Microsoft I’m a PC work and Student Fine Art Series for a series of images on Beijing I made this past August. I’ll update this page with an image from that series soon.

Last year I had fun going through the list of nominations and linking to their portfolio pages. This year I think there are way too many with almost 300 nominations! So, until I get an intern I’ll let you google them this time.

If you going to be around this weekend let me know I would love to run into people at the festival. I am not sure how much of it I can make since I have a very busy weekend with Graduation on Friday! but you should check out the festival’s schedule here.

from the Press Release:

NYPHA’09 Nominations
The Jury of the New York Photo Awards 2009 (NYPHA’09) is pleased to announce the following Nominees.

To be named a nominee of the New York Photo Awards 2009 means that one has been selected for the final round of judging, during which time only three finalists will be chosen (Winner and two Honorable Mentions). Considering the number of rounds that the Jury has already been through, being nominated is truly an award in and of itself. We are very proud of this year’s Nominees. It is clear that they represent the Future of Contemporary Photography, and we wish them continued success.

The Winners and Honorable Mentions will be announced (and their work presented) at the Gala Ceremony for the New York Photo Awards 2009 on Friday, May 15th at 8pm in the St. Ann’s Warehouse Auditorium. This is a special ticketed event, there are only 415 seats, and they are selling out fast. Last year, we packed the place to the gills, and still had another 200+ people flowing out to the streets. So, if you want a seat, you have to have a ticket. Festival passes and tickets can be purchased here.

Without much further ado, the Nominees for the New York Photo Awards 2009 are:

NEW YORK PHOTO AWARDS 2009

NOMINEES

Editorial Single Image
Larry Louie
Bob O’Connor
Christopher Wahl
Pierre Alivon
Michael Goermann
Niels Ahlmann Oleson
McKay Jaffe
Erik Swain
Felix Hug
Ed Kashi
Ryan Carter (5 images)
Marieke van der Velden (3 images)
Carol Allen Storey
Mike Callaghan
Christopher Petersen
Emily Shur (2 images)
Sarah Bones
Patrick de Warren
Thomas Leffeldt/Ekstra Bladet (3 images)
J Carrier (3 images)
Jens Honore
Marc Josse
Jenn Ackerman
Gleb Garanich
Jessica Rinaldi
Jonathan Ernst
Goran Tomosevic
Finbarr O’ Reilly
Nadav Kander (4 images)
Charles Ommanney
Mads Nissen
Elene Usdin
Stephen Mallon
Toby Smith 

Editorial Series
Dirk-Jan Visser (2 series)
Dima Gavrysh
Ricardo Garcia
Albertina d’Urso (2 series)
Denis Rouvre
Gary Dwyer
Michael Goermann
Coco Amardell
Emilio Morenatti
David Guttenfelder
Oded Balilty
Jerome Delay
Lynsey Addario
Espen Rasmussen (2 series)
Ed Kashi (2 series)
Ryan Carter
Gerald Slota
Christian Als
Ethan James
Gabriele Stabile
Jagath Dheerasekara
Thomas Lekfeldt/Ekstra Bladet
Moises Saman
Matthieu Paley
Clemence de Limburg
Tim Gruber
Finbarr O’Reilly
Alex Majoli
Charles Ommanney
Shaul Schwarz
Tiana-Markova-Gold
Q. Sakamaki
Carol Guzy
Michael Corridore
T.J. Kirkpatrick

Fine Art Single Image
Amro Hamzawi
Christy Karpinski
John Offenbach (3 images)
Marco Munoz
Wai Yan Lam
Anthony M. Puopolo (2 images)
Ognian Gueorguiev
Robert Burton (2 images)
Steph Tout (2 images)
Romulo Bosch Sans
David Finnegan
Dana Matthews
Niobe Syme
Mara Catalan
Richard Sandler
Arsian Sukan
Mike Whelan
Claudio Uema
Finn O’Hara
Richard Pak
Andrew Maccoli
John Clang
Anna Moller
Lottie Davies (2 images)
Stephanie Diani
Marti Belcher
Erik Swain
Burkhard Schittny
Matthew Besinger
Elise Bruccoliere
Joel Redmen
D. Yee
Adam Makarenko
Lisa Wiseman
Carla van de Puttelaar
Sarah Sudhoff
Kathleen Wilke
Adriana Zehbrauskas
Doug Menuez
Davina Feinberg
Michelle Sank
Lucas Bori
Konrad Junkiewicz

Fine Art Series
Eliot Ross
Sabrina Jung
Lydia Panas
Horst Josch
Odette England (2 series)
Natasha Bedu
Sarah Wilmer
Shi Xiofan
Kevin Miyazaki
Ingrid Baars
Julia Fullerton-Batten
Jessica Kaufman
Chiara Goia
J Bennett Fitts
Daniel Traub
Eric Percher
Patricia Martin
Justin James King
Francesco Bittichesu
Damion Berger
Brad Moore
Juliane Elrich
Louis Ingalls Sturges
Greg Miller
Alexander Gronsky 

Advertising Single
Linda Jansen
Sanjay Kotahari (2 images)
Lorenzo Vitturi
Bryce Pincham
Raul Krebs (2 images)
Adam Hinton
Kai-Uwe Gundlach
Dominik Sklarzyk
Lauren Greenfield
Fedrick Clement
Emir Haveric
Marcel Christ

Advertising Series
John Offenbach
Harlan Erskine
Mark Janssen
Julia Fullerton-Batten
John Clang
Raul Krebs
Giullyani
Adam Hinton
John Midgley
Nadav Kander (2 series)
Lauren Greenfield
Morad Bouchakour
Doug Menuez

Photo Book
Benjamin Antony Monn
Michael Limbert
Marc McAndrews
Ernesto bazan
Lisa Pram
Michael Grecco
Lynn Saville
Gino Sullivan
Fran Forman
Dana Lixenberg
Danelle manthey
Martine Fougeron
Julia Fullerton-Batten
Michal Chelbin (2 books)
Joni Sternbach
Jane Hilton
Jona Frank
Naomi Harris
Ellen Rennard
Adam Hinton
Simon Brown
Alexandra Avakian
Shen Wei
Charlotte Oestervang
Matthew Sallee
Scarlett Coten
Rob Hornstra
Priya Kambil
Eric McNatt
Herman van den Boom
Doug DuBois
Alexandra Lier
Emrie Foster
Nina Berman
Brooke Mayo
Jorge Albarracin
Simon Roberts
Darcy Padilla
Glenn Lockitch
Andrew Borowiec
Ghada Khunji
Otto Snoek
Barbara Crane
Tiny Vices (Kenneth Cappello, Allan Macintyre, Jason Nocito, Robin Schwartz and Jamie Warren)
Hank Willis Thomas
Jacqueline Hassink
Joshua Lutz
Henry Horenstein

Student Editorial Single
Andy Spyra
Alberto Lizaralde (2 images)
Connie Zhou
Jamie Hopper
Erica Fahr Campbell
Manuel Gil
Andrea Star Reese (5 images)
Aki Takematsu
Helga Traxler
Peter Ash Lee
Ben Franke
Sean Rizzotti
Kitra Cahana
Ed Ou 

Student Social Documentary Essay
Andy Spyra
Alberto Lizaralde
Ryan Gauvin
Erik Shirai
Carl Kiilsgaard
Isadora Kosofsky
Andrea Star Reese
Natan Dvir
Luca Tommasini
Edith Wagner
Ani Kington
Taylor Weldman
Daniel Schumann
Andre Hermann
Evgenia Arbugaeva
Nina Flauaus
Mikko Takkunen
Rafaela Persson
Ed Ou
Ilana Panich-Linsman

Student Fine Art Single
Emily Burke
Ward Roberts
Lora Jude Dewolfe
Frederic Gosselin
Dorothee Smith
Dina Gold
Marikei Lahana
Todd McVey
Mark Fernandes
Laure Amanou (3 images)
Jaime Permuth
Jun Ahn
Mark Kasumovic
Natan Dvir (2 images)
Marton Perlaki (2 iimages)
James Thomson & Hannah Huddy
Bridget Collins
Takaki Oishi
Tyler Brown
Fellsia Tandiono

Student Fine Art Series
Amy Burchenal
Elliot Wilcox
Ward Roberts
Harlan Erskine
Thomas Lobenwein
Fabiano Busdraghi
Ivonne Thein
Tara Cronin
Grant Willing
Aislinn Leggett
Tammy Mercure
Wayne Liu
Laure Amanou
Liang-Pin Tsao
Pedro Lopez
Yijun Liao

Student Photo Book
Robin Maddock
Wassily Zittel
Wayne Liu
Patrik Budenz
Johanna Heldebro
Louise Ingalls Sturges
Alinka Echeverria
Felix Kindermann
Kristoffer Axen
Vanessa Bahmani
Adam Lau