Portrait photography is a diverse and fascinating genre, one with a long and storied history that dates back to the mediumโs embryonic days.
For generations, practitioners have sought to capture the quintessence of others in a single frame: their emotions, complexities, and character.
To celebrate our annual Portrait Award, we surveyed the winners and finalists from all awards held over the previous 12 months and selected 10 portraits that display the immense potential of the genre.
1. โMykie, Skinheadโ Hackney, London, UK โ Owen Harvey (1st Prize Winner Portrait Award May 2021)
Selected by world-renowned photographer Nadav Kander as the winner of our Portrait Award in May of this year, Owen Harveyโs arresting and intriguing portrait expresses the unique disposition of the youthful subject.
Though captured recently, the girlโs distinct guise (a rendition of the once-ubiquitous skinhead style that emerged in Londonโs working-class neighborhoods during the 1960s) combined with the muted analog tones, endows it with a vintage-aesthetic, as though from a different time, whilst her demeanor, intense and unflinching, provokes deep curiosity. Who is she? What is she thinking? What is her story?
2. โThe Special Eaglesโ, Lagos, Nigeria โ Jack Lawson (Finalist, Visual Storytelling Award, January 2021)
Jack Lawsonโs striking image portrays four members of Nigeriaโs amputee football team, โThe Special Eaglesโ, on a beach near Lagos, the countryโs largest city.
Beautifully framed and characterized by a masterful appreciation of light and form, it is an emphatic composition that captivates with immediacy: four men, set against a watercolor-like ocean vista, united by a deep and unflinching bond and a shared love for โthe beautiful gameโ.
3. โThe Soul Withinโ โ Berber Theunissen (1st Prize Winner, Visual Storytelling Award, January 2021)
Berber Theunissenโs medium-format self-portrait, juror Nichole Sobeckiโs winning selection for our Visual Storytelling award back in January (and the cover image of our 2021 Talents of the Year photobook, available here) transcends traditional portrayals of the pregnant female form. Veiled by the diaphanous drapes and illuminated by the natural light from the window, her silhouette appears ethereal and ghost-like, a physical manifestation of her very soul.
A truly extraordinary image, it is an embodiment of the artistโs own experiences, that evinces a complexity of thoughts and feelings: โfatigue, heartbreaking fears, overwhelming responsibilities alternated with a soft inner peace, overpowering happiness.โ
4. โGangs of New Zealandโ โ Casey Morton (Editorโs pick, Open Call Award, August 2021)
Part of a series depicting members of New Zealandโs infamous Black Power gang, Casey Mortonโs striking image is an excellent example of a contemporary subject portrayed in a โclassicโ portrait style.
Often vilified and scapegoated by the countryโs mainstream media, the gangโs members are primarily Maori men who, in Mortonโs words โhave fallen through the cracks of societyโ. His aim, (after gaining their trust through mutual acquaintances) was to challenge such preconceptions, to portray them with complete equity and veracity, and thus give the viewer the space and freedom to form their own opinion.
5. โPraying #2โ, Madison County, North Carolina, USA โ Jack Sorokin (3rd Prize Winner, Open Call Award, August 2021)
Jack Sorokinโs arresting portrait is part of a series exploring masculinity through the microcosm of his local rodeo.
In contrast to โtraditionalโ portraiture, it is completely unstaged: a young man caught in a moment of quiet prayer, simultaneously imparts strength and vulnerability. It displays an impressive apperception of light, defined by understated, hues, that endow it with a wonderful painting-like quality, and demonstrates perfectly how a single portrait can both capture the atmosphere of a fleeting moment in time, and reveal the intricacies of others.
6. โBaruchโ โ Laura Pannack (Finalist, Visual Storytelling Award, January 2021)
English photographer, Laura Pannack, is a master of capturing the personalities of youthful subjects, exemplified beautifully in this image taken from a series which, in the artistโs words, โexplores how we choose our paths in life and questions how much control we have to change who we will becomeโ.
Baruch, the eponym and protagonist of the series, chose to leave his Orthodox Jewish community aged 16 in order to study at university. Pictured here, melancholic and alone, his pale face framed against the emerald-green pillow, he reflects on his decision, pondering his identity and future: a quiet moment of weary introspection, with which many will relate.
7. โAnonymous Memoriesโ โ Fleur Louwe (Finalist, Emerging Talent Award, March 2021)
Fleur Louweโs conceptual self-portrait is a fascinating reflection on the very nature of photography.
In comparison to more โclassicalโ art forms, the medium is often said to portray reality, but Louwe challenges this conception, creating a surreal and arresting composition, (inspired by baroque sculpture) that blurs the lines between artist and subject, and thus displays the profound creative potential of photographic portraiture.
8. โPa and his Roosterโ, Ireland (2nd Prize Winner, Portrait Award, May 2021)
Bob Newmanโs depiction of a young Irish traveler boy and his rooster, is a wonderful attestation to the power of photographic portraiture.
Our protagonist, positioned dead center, immediately apprehends our attention: his unflinching gaze conveys a strength and maturity that belies his clear juvenility. A litany of textures: the tattered backdrop; the roosterโs feathers; the boyโs face and clothes; combine with the subtle hues to further intensify our interest, and evoke the early color transcriptions of Ireland by the great Inge Morath.
9. โCabin Lifeโ, Norway โ Junko Akita (1st Prize Winner, Emerging Talent Award, March 2021)
Truly extraordinary Junko Akitaโs image, (which, in March of this year, was selected by the Washington Postโs renowned Director of Photography MaryAnne Golon as the finest entrant to our Emerging Talent Award) captured whilst on vacation in northern Norway, grips the viewer from the outset. The gaze of the child; the subtle reflection of the remote Norwegian scenery illuminated softly by the fading natural light; it is at once, intimate, moving, and emphatic, a composition that captures and celebrates the joy of family, whilst simultaneously provoking a strong sense of wanderlust (which seems particularly potent perhaps due to the restrictions of recent times).
10. โHugโ โ KyeongJun Yang (Finalist, Open Call Award, August 2021)
From the series โMen Donโt Cryโ, Kyeongjun Yangโs moving portrait is a remarkably powerful and personal transcription that testifies to a fatherโs love for his family. Beautifully composed within the equilateral confines of the medium-format frame, the subjects (the photographerโs own mother and father) express their profound devotion and interdependence, whilst the sultry air applies a gauzy filter to the muted monochrome tones, and serves as a delicate metaphor of the theme.
All images ยฉ their respective owners