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The

Artist

Adél Koleszár

Lives and Works in
Adél Koleszár (1986) is originally from Hungary, where she graduated with a Masters in Fine Art Photography at the Moholy-Nagy University of Fine and Applied Arts, after receiving a BA degree in Social Sciences in Budapest. In the past years she has been working and living in Mexico, where she works with the aim of completing her visual research on human violence. In 2013 she arrived to the country thanks to a Mexican Governmental Artist Residency Program, in 2014 her project on contemporary religions in Mexico was selected as finalist by Magnum Photos & Ideastap Photography Award, in 2015 she was the winner of the Budapest Portfolio Prize, in 2016-17 receiver of the Pécsi József Scholarship which supports the work of young Hungarian photographers. Between march and may of 2016 she taught locals in several cities along the US/Mexican border as part of a self initiated, open and free to everyone workshop project, Vision del Norte, with the aim to teach the participants how to use the visual language of photography to express their thoughts about the reality they are living in, and share it with a wider public in a form of a book which compiled the vision of each participants. The same year she was the solo exhibitor of the Discovery Show section of the Fotofestiwal Lodz, and her book „New Routes of Faith” was shortlisted on the Unseen Photography Dummy Award. Her work was exhibited and published widely in her country and internationally, amongst in Berlin, Mexico City, New York, Arles, Vienna, and featured on Foam Spotlight, Vice Mexico, Fotografia Magazine, Der Grief. Currently she keeps working on new projects, as well as continues the investigation on the alternative religious forms in Mexico.

The focus of my work in the past years has been human violence and poverty: how its constant reception can restructure the society and the self. I live and work in Mexico with the aim of completing my visual research on this topic, where I look for cultural movements, group activities, individual destinies which exist as consequence of the persistent violence and repress. My goal is to be engaged from an intimate closeness in order to witness, capture the essence of these realities, emotionally, mentally strongly involve the viewer into the topics I'm working with, to give the audience another perspective on the reasons why their lifestyle may often appear to be controversial and condemned, where I believe the key always lies in a brutal social and political system. I aim to give voice and visibility for people who are social outcasts, victims of injustice, showing contemporary social conflicts in a different context and narrative other than the newspapers. The photograph's focal point is a physical remnant of violence – a scar, a bruise, or a symbolic conduit, landscape – while the non-physical remnants of aggression are left to the viewer to interpret through a gaze, expression or pose and in physical space accompanied with text, interviews, even sound, so the story can become a whole, questioning faith, the nature of human and it's behavior.

More: http://koladel.org/

Projects

Wounds of Violence

The series deals with geographical and urban sites of Mexico where illegal, contemporary mass grave shave been discovered, contrasting the local landscape that has been violated by these graves with the mental, physical consequences that these extremes has on women in the area. The photos portray women who have been subjected to these conditions, so searching for relief in alternative religions, drugs or the abuse have left visible marks on their bodies.

Adél Koleszár
was nominated by
Robert Capa Contemporary Photography Center
in
2019
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

Anna Ádám has a rich practice, merging her various interests into an aesthetically driven installation, somewhere between the kitsch and the contemporary. I believe the jury was attracted to her unique performative practice and its potential beyond the photographic.

Set in the studio, the work of Krystyna Bilak is carefully constructed, its presence controlled, the location measured; she builds stories where only selected elements are added as contributors to the narration. Everything is precise, and the results are astonishing. I was particularly glad to discover her practice, that I hope to present in Ireland soon.

Kata Geibl‘s practice exudes visual sophistication, with well-researched and carefully constructed bodies of work such as Sisyphus. Here, a pseudo-scientific vocabulary makes the images intriguing, while the project itself questions our almost religious admiration for Science. It would not be hard to see this work exhibited widely.

Olga Kocsi‘s practice based research is hyper-playful, demonstrating the modus operandi of an artist whose everyday is questioned oftentimes with amusing results. I enjoyed her video works specifically, with her witty humour and conceptual approach.

Adél Koleszár has focused her practice on bringing us closer into Mexican crime-related violence and their religious views, in New Routes of Faith. Closer, not to see the fresh wounds bleeding, but the human side; to see the misery and the sublime in the everyday life, with a personal approach that evidences what she is capable of. It would be interesting to see where she puts her ambition next, she is certainly one to follow.

Angel Luis Gonzalez, CEO PhotoIreland Foundation