Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/aug/14/wellcome-photography-prize-launched-with-focus-health-research
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Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health
1. 8/23/2018 Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health | Art and design | The Guardian
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Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on
health
Mark Brown Arts correspondent
Competition aims to encourage a ‘more diverse view of what research and health
means’
Tue 14 Aug 2018 16.18 BST
A new international photography prize for pictures that tell stories about health, medicine and
science has been launched by the charitable foundation Wellcome.
It said the competition aimed to do for health what the Natural History Museum’s wildlife
photographer of the year award had done for nature or the Prix Pictet prize had done for
environmental and sustainability issues.
The Wellcome photography prize is a revamp and expansion of the Wellcome image awards
that ran for 20 years, a long enough period to warrant a re-examination of the prize, said
Jeremy Farrar, director of Wellcome. “We’ve changed, the world has changed and the way
health and research works has changed.”
He said he hoped the new prize, as part of Wellcome’s mission to improve health, would
encourage “a more diverse view of what research and health means”.
2. 8/23/2018 Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health | Art and design | The Guardian
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He added: “As a doctor and a scientist, I’ve seen how powerful visual imagery can start
conversations, bring complex arguments to life and change the way the world responds to
health challenges.”
For many years the prize targeted clinical and imaging experts. The new prize is open to
anyone, whether a photographer, photojournalist, artist, researcher or clinical photographer. It
is free to enter and comes with a boosted first prize of £15,000.
There will be four new categories in which people can submit images, including one called
“hidden worlds”. “That could be the microscopic world,” said Farrar. “But I’m certainly hoping
that the hidden world will be taken in a very broad context and can be interpreted in any way a
great photographer chooses.”
The other categories are “medicine in focus”, “social perspectives” and a global health theme
that will change annually. In 2019 it will be “outbreaks”, something that remains grimly
topical with the recent news of a return of the Ebola virus to the Democratic Republic of the
Congo.
Farrar said winning entries “might be based on one person or a family, have a cast of millions
or reveal what’s happening in a single cell. What will unite them is the quality of the image and
the astonishing stories behind them.”
Susan Smart’s photo of a patient being treated at a makeshift eye
clinic in India won the Wellcome image award in 2017. Photograph:
Susan Smart/Wellcome
3. 8/23/2018 Wellcome photography prize launched with focus on health | Art and design | The Guardian
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The deadline for submissions is 17 December. Winners will be announced at an awards
ceremony in the summer of 2019, and an exhibition of the best photographs will be staged at
the Central Saint Martins Lethaby Gallery in London.
People entering the contest will clearly be tackling big, serious and sometimes life-and-death
subjects, but Farrar said that did not rule out quirkiness. “A sense of humour through all of this
is crucial.”
Farrar will be chair of a judging panel that also consists of Pete Muller, a National Geographic
photographer; Joanne Liu, international president of Médecins Sans Frontières; Dr Heidi
Larson, director of the Vaccine Confidence Project at the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine; Dan M Davis, professor of immunology at the University of Manchester;
Emma Bowkett, director of photography at FT Weekend magazine; and Azu Nwagbogu,
curator at large for photography at the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa in Cape
Town, South Africa.
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