The artists nominated by
The artists selected by PHotoESPAÑA in this edition are: Marius Scarlat (Romania, 1993), Antonio Guerra (Zamora, 1983), Suwon Lee (Caracas, 1977), Carlos Alba (Madrid, 1984) and Arguiñe Escandón (Bilbao, 1979). The possibility of seeing their work together offers us a contemporary vision of photography in Spain, in which proposals that are more documentary in nature are displayed side by side with works that are more conceptual, with the use of photography that intersects with installation. In the midst of the digital age, the pandemic has intensified the need to think about our immediate environment and our social relationships.
In this context, the work of the authors selected offers us a space for reflection and confrontation about issues relating to globalisation, technology and the environment. Marius Ionus Scarlat works on issues of Romanian identity from a personal perspective marked by his family’s migration to Spain. Suwon Lee also does it from a gender perspective and through her own body in light-based performative actions. Antonio Guerra investigates the construction of contemporary landscape its transformation processes and our perception of it through image, in a work that merges photography and sculpture.
Technology is also present in the artworks of Carlos Alba who addresses issues relating to everyday life in a world in continuous transformation. The specific project he presents is on light pollution in large contemporary cities. Contemporary nightscapes of great beauty that hide devastating effects on the population and the environment. Finally, night light is also the object of study along with sound in the project presented by Arguiñe Escandón, through which she has investigated the
paranormal effects occurring in an area of the Spanish Mediterranean produced by a magnetism that alters the life of the inhabitants, the fauna and the flora.
The five authors are at a crucial moment in their careers. In the past year, their work has been critically acclaimed and they boast international experience they can expand thanks to the Futures platform.
The artists selected by PHotoESPAÑA in this edition are: Marius Scarlat (Romania, 1993), Antonio Guerra (Zamora, 1983), Suwon Lee (Caracas, 1977), Carlos Alba (Madrid, 1984) and Arguiñe Escandón (Bilbao, 1979). The possibility of seeing their work together offers us a contemporary vision of photography in Spain, in which proposals that are more documentary in nature are displayed side by side with works that are more conceptual, with the use of photography that intersects with installation. In the midst of the digital age, the pandemic has intensified the need to think about our immediate environment and our social relationships.
In this context, the work of the authors selected offers us a space for reflection and confrontation about issues relating to globalisation, technology and the environment. Marius Ionus Scarlat works on issues of Romanian identity from a personal perspective marked by his family’s migration to Spain. Suwon Lee also does it from a gender perspective and through her own body in light-based performative actions. Antonio Guerra investigates the construction of contemporary landscape its transformation processes and our perception of it through image, in a work that merges photography and sculpture.
Technology is also present in the artworks of Carlos Alba who addresses issues relating to everyday life in a world in continuous transformation. The specific project he presents is on light pollution in large contemporary cities. Contemporary nightscapes of great beauty that hide devastating effects on the population and the environment. Finally, night light is also the object of study along with sound in the project presented by Arguiñe Escandón, through which she has investigated the
paranormal effects occurring in an area of the Spanish Mediterranean produced by a magnetism that alters the life of the inhabitants, the fauna and the flora.
The five authors are at a crucial moment in their careers. In the past year, their work has been critically acclaimed and they boast international experience they can expand thanks to the Futures platform.
Antonio Guerra (b. 1983, Spain). His practice shows an interdisciplinary approach to the photography medium that reflects on systems of construction in the contemporary landscape, the processes of their transformation, and our own perception of them through images.
Guerra’s work has been exhibited individually in institutions and art centres such as The Domus Artium 2002 (DA2) in Salamanca, Centro Niemeyer in Asturias, Sala Amárica in Vitoria-Gasteiz, the PHotoEspaña festival in Madrid, Centro Leonés de Arte (CLA) in León, and several art galleries. He has also exhibited in the Biennial of Young Artists from Europe and the Mediterranean (BJCEM) in Ancona, Italy and Thessaloniki, Greece; Talent Latent in Tarragona; Encontros da Imagem in Braga, Portugal; BredaPhoto International Photo Festival, Holland; the Embassy of Spain in Havana, Cuba; and Instituto Cervantes in Madrid. For his work, he has received a MUSAC Artistic Creation Grant, a Pilar Juncosa & Sotheby’s Award from the Miró Mallorca Foundation, a Villalar Foundation grant, a Community of Madrid Visual Art Grant, a VEGAP Grant for Visual Creation, and the Roberto Villagraz grant from EFTI. He has been artist in residence at the Casa de Velázquez Académie de France in Madrid and his work is included in public and private collections.
Arguiñe Escandón (Bilbao, 1979) focuses her attention on psychological and sociological aspects, as well as on exploring emotional bonds. Working on the thin line between fiction and reality, she builds in her photographs an imaginary wrapped in mysterious atmospheres.
In 2020, her work was shortlisted for the Prix Elysée and the Galicia Contemporary Photography Award. She also was a winner of the Fine Arts and Photography grant given by the Spanish Ministry of Culture and nominated at the Swiss Design Awards, amongst other recognitions.
She has exhibited in places such as Wilde Gallery (Geneva), Images Vevey, Verzasca Photo (Switzerland), Galería C19 (Ibiza), Galería Serendipia, Galería OTR (Madrid) and others.
Her book “Aya” published by RM (in conjunction with Yann Gross) has been recognized as one of the best books of 2020 by institutions such as PhotoEspaña or the Lucie Foundation (NY).
Prominent media like Aperture Magazine, El País, Fisheye, Gup, Le Temps, Liberation, Vogue Italia and Vistprojects have published her work.
Carlos Alba (b. 1984, Madrid, Spain) lives and works between London, Singapore and Madrid. He is a visual artist working mainly with photography, video, painting and installation. His work focuses on human and non-human relationships in the modern world, especially subjects related to his life. He uses his artwork as therapy to understand his feelings, his past, his masculinity, and his fears. He is exploring issues from everyday life, especially those that affect vulnerable living beings. His tools are objects and archives that help him find the final visual artwork he wants to make.
Alba received prizes in the Tokyo International Photography Competition (Japan, 2017), Landskrona Foto Festival (Sweden, 2017), Flash Forward UK (Canada, 2016) and Zona C Visual Artist Awards (Spain, 2015). He was a finalist for the Best Photobook of the Year Award by PHotoEspaña (Spain, 2020), the GetxoPhoto Festival (Spain, 2019), the BMW Art & Culture (France, 2017), Encontros da Imagem (Portugal, 2016), Grand Prix Fotofestiwal (Poland, 2016) and the Descubrimientos PHotoEspaña Award (Spain, 2015). His work has been exhibited at various galleries and museums worldwide, most recently at the Lianzhou Museum of Photography (China, 2021), Hayward Gallery (London, 2019), the Tokyo International Photography Competition (TIPC) (Japan, 2018), Singapore International Photography Festival (Singapore, 2018), Landskrona Foto (Landskrona, 2018), Format Photography Festival (Derby, UK, 2017), Auditorio de Galicia (Santiago de Compostela, Spain, 2017), La Fábrica Gallery (Madrid, Spain, 2016), Fotofestiwal Art_Inkubator (Lódź, Poland, 2016), PHotoEspaña (Madrid, Spain, 2016), Circulation(s) festival (Paris, France, 2016) DOCfield Barcelona festival at Arts Santa Mònica (Spain, 2016), Bitume Photofest (Lecce, Italy, 2016), and MOMus-Thessaloniki Museum of Photography (Greece, 2016). His monographs, ‘The Taste of The Wind’ (2019) and ‘The Observation of Trifles’ (2016), are part of collections in institutions such as Tate Library (UK), Harvard Library (USA), Deck (Singapore), The Library Project (Ireland), Lightbox Photography Library (Taiwan), Reminders Photography Stronghold (RPS) (Japan), Fundación Foto Colectanica (Spain), and Landskrona Museum (Sweden).
Marius Ionut Scarlat (b. 1993, Romania) is a documentary photographer living and working between Romania and Spain. He obtained a B.A. in Audiovisual Communication at the University of Alcalá, but began his career as a photographer after finishing his Master’s in Artistic Photography at the TAI School of the Arts. Since then, he has dedicated himself to carrying out his personal projects.
Scarlat’s work has been recognised and awarded in several national and international competitions, such as PHotoEspaña, the Emerging Photographer Fund (Magnum Foundation), World Nomads, Promoción del Arte at Tabacalera Cantera, Visa pour l’image, Matera European Photography, Artistas Novos, and Creación Injuve. In 2021 he received a bookmaking scholarship at Magnum Photos. This year he also has received a long-term mentorship scholarship at Magnum Photos, and he is currently working with Gregory Halpern and Alessandra Sanguinetti for this project.
Scarlat has always been interested in working with his family from Romania. After leaving in 2005 at the age of 11 and having spent 15 years away, his relationship with them has changed. In his projects, he like to insist on those tensions and conflicts that have arisen as a result of moving to Spain. He is interested in Eastern Europe, Romania, alcoholics, his mother, religion, death, the traces of communism on people's faces, gypsies, children, the cemetery, the lake, wedding dresses, unmarried women, dead girls in wedding dresses, dead horses, boys playing soccer, abandoned dogs, funerals, weddings, enchantments, women who are going to clean the graves in the cemetery, flowers, gold…
Suwon Lee (b. 1977, Caracas, Venezuela) is currently based in Madrid, Spain. Through photography and various media, she tracks her passage through this lifetime. In this sense, her work is an open-ended, existential, and ongoing process, determined by the events of her life. She uses her condition as a cross-cultural woman, daughter of Korean migrants born in Venezuela and then forced to migrate, to question notions of identity, time, territory, embodiment, exile, and affectivity. She is a hybrid, a being who questions herself and transforms constantly, adapting to each context, thus adding a new layer of being to her work with each opportunity.
Lee has exhibited individually in Caracas, Madrid, and in international group shows such as the Guangzhou Image Triennial curated by Gerardo Mosquera (2021); Vincent Price Art Museum, California, USA (2018); Arizona State University Art Museum, USA (2017); Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain, Paris, France (2013); Museo Amparo, Puebla, Mexico (2014); the 9th Bienal do Mercosul (2013), and Biennial of the Americas 2013: Draft Urbanism. She has contributed to many other shows in the US, Brazil, Venezuela, Panama, Spain, Colombia, Chile, Seoul, and Paris, among others.
Lee’s works are in the collections of MoMA in New York (USA), Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros (USA), Cisternos Fontanals Art Foundation (CIFO) in Miami (USA), Colección Banco Mercantil (Venezuela), Museu de Arte Brasileira da Fundação Armando Alvares Penteado (Brazil), and in various private collections in Venezuela, Colombia, USA, Spain, Germany, Costa Rica, Argentina, and Puerto Rico.
Lee studied photography at the Speos Paris Photographic Institute in 2001–2002. In 2006, she took the PHotoEspaña Masterclass with German photographer Axel Hütte and subsequently travelled with him on several photography trips in Latin America, Europe, and Asia from 2006 through 2019. She also studied with Nelson Garrido in his experimental photography workshop in Caracas, Venezuela (2007).
In addition to her career as a visual artist, Lee co-founded and was co-director of the Venezuelan artist-run space Oficina #1 (www.oficina1.com) for more than ten years (2005–2015), helping to launch the careers of emerging artists from Venezuela.