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Annie Leibovitz’s inaugural photography prize announces winner.

French photographer Zélie Hallosserie, whose work documents the urgent realities of immigrant life in Europe, has been named the inaugural winner of the Saltzman-Leibovitz Photography Prize. The 21-year-old artist is currently completing her bachelor’s degree in photography at ESA Saint-Luc Tournai in Belgium.

The prize was launched by American artist Annie Leibovitz, known for her bold, posed portraits of celebrities, in partnership with New York–based photographer Lisa Saltzman. The prize totals $20,000, supported by the Saltzman Foundation, with Hallosserie receiving the $10,000 first-place award. Shortlisted artists include Ukrainian artist Elena Kalinichenko, American photographer Ka’Vozia Glynn, Nigerian artist Praise Hassan, Romanian artist Toma Hurduc, and London-based Trâm Nguyễn Quang. Shortlisted artists were selected from a mentorship program run by Leibovitz. Their work will be part of a group presentation at Photo London 2025, which runs from May 15th to 18th.

Hallosserie is currently working on a project titled “The Game,” which captures the stories of migrants passing through Calais, France, on their way to the United Kingdom. Her work has documented people from countries such as Iraq, Iran, Syria, Afghanistan, Sudan, and Eritrea as they prepare to cross the English Channel.

“Zélie’s photography stands out for its ability to humanize complex social issues with sincerity and depth,” said Saltzman. “Her sensitive approach not only highlights critical social issues but also connects viewers emotionally to the resilience and humanity of her subjects. Supporting artists like Zélie is precisely why we founded this prize.”

Based in Tournai, Belgium, Hallosserie has regularly visited a local shelter across the French border as part of the project. The artist hopes her work can disrupt the discriminatory depictions of immigrants across Europe. “Photography allows me to defend subjects close to my heart, to create genuine connections, and to constantly challenge my own perspective,” Hallosserie said in a press release. “This recognition was unexpected, but I’m incredibly grateful for the opportunity and visibility it brings to a cause and project that mean so much to me,” she added.

Artists shortlisted for the prize were selected by Whitney Museum of Art curator Drew Sawyer, photo editor Kira Pollack, scholar and curator Isolde Brielmaier, and creative director of Vogue Raul Martinez.

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Art That Always Looks Ahead: An Interview with Ivana Ivković

Art That Always Looks Ahead: An Interview with Ivana Ivković
Ivana Ivković (b. 1979 in Belgrade) observes that in moments of upheaval, art watches and waits. The Serbian artist works in the space between vulnerability and resistance, and she has taken to the streets. Her multidisciplinary practice traverses drawing, photography, installation, and delegated performance, and Ivković often uses the male body to examine power, trust, foreshadowing, and collapse. She notes, in this way, that her work transcends time.
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Brian Calvin Measuring “Wavelengths” in London

Brian Calvin Measuring
Brian Calvin is a familiar and constantly evolving face. The fact that he paints himself into the works and the shows makes sense of this, but Calvin has continually expanded and contracted his visual language as he and those around him age. In that Katzian universe of the portrait being a marker of time, that the familiarity of the artist and subject giving depth to the composition, Calvin is exploring himself in the context of those around him. Wavelengths at Corvi-Mora in London is broken into two bodies of works, those self-portraits and a series of female heads that has long been part of his practice. As always, they feel fresh, bright, abstracted but literal. This is Calvin’s life, and…
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