COMPETITION ENTRY & PORTFOLIO REVIEW

2. Lens culture Critics choice 2024: Global Call —Deadline: April 17, 2024

Before I entered this I emailed my OCA peers and asked:

So I decided to submit and request a review

Details: 1 single image free, or series of up to 10, judged as a series, which should work as a group, thematically or aesthetically. $45- 30% = $31.5- £25.30 $49 us total after discount. Optional, Receive a written review of your work for an additional $25. This is a unique opportunity to receive valuable and specific feedback on your work from one of our experienced industry professionals. Submission Reviews are done anonymously and will be completed by June, 2024 on a first-come, first-served basis.

It is a rare opportunity to have your work seen by 20 of the photography world’s leading experts. The work will be immediately reviewed by their editors. Selected submissions will be featured in their Competition Gallery and published across all their online channels, reaching an international audience of 3 million. (For example, more than 511 early entries were selected and featured during the 2023 Critics’ Choice Awards, and more than 200 of those were promoted via Lens Culture’s Instagram and Facebook platforms, garnering more than 400,000 likes and comments.) Enter your work early to take advantage of this incredible opportunity for global exposure!

Upload jpegs or pngs that are a minimum of 1200 pixels on the longest side (but up to 2000 pixels is fine) and no more than 10 MB.

This time I was working with a character limit of 2000 for my statement and bio, so adjusted to fit, but crucially I adjusted it to fit the criteria of the competition and that of the judge who was relevant to my category, ‘Places’. I also gave additional information to my reviewer, see below.

MY SUBMISSION:

WHAT LIES BENEATH

Statement Lens culture

What Lies Within, is a series of images taken in an ancient woodland. A conceptual project, it uses the landscape as a medium to express my thoughts on community. The photography transforms abstract ideas in my head, into something concrete, positioning the ancient woodland as a visual metaphor for community.

Though humans provoked the concept of the work, they are not evident in the images. The local community, often disharmonious and driven by difference, is in stark contrast with the harmonious characteristics of the woodland society. Footnote images signpost inherent qualities like cooperation, support, diversity, resilience, inclusion, networking, mutual exchange, and adaptation, which could be beneficially adopted in many human communities.

Known and accepted for some years, like other incomers in my neighbourhood, we are never adopted as local, no matter how long passes or the contribution to the community – a story common to settings across the globe.

Combining the world in my head with the one in front of me, through an internal and external passage through the landscape, has helped to heal some of the wounds that inspired the story’s beginning.

ARTIST BIO

Niki South was born and grew up in England. From 1995 she began holidaying in Wales; this culminated in buying a second home there in 2009 and transitioning to a ‘dual centre’ life between the two places. In 2019 she relocated to Wales permanently.

Currently completing her BA (Hons) Photography degree with the Open University, she has a particular interest in community. Her previous documentary work ‘Layers of Truth’ was informed by her ‘insider/outsider’ position where she highlighted issues arising during Covid 19 from ‘incomers’ trying to integrate into a small traditional community.

My submission: https://www.lensculture.com/submission-reviews/107428See the review below received 26.4.24: https://www.lensculture.com/submission-reviews/107428

Additional info I gave to the reviewer:

1. What is the single most important question/concern you have about your project that you wish to have answered here in this review?

Do the footnotes combined with the artist statement adequately signpost the story behind the series? Can a viewer understand the concept of the woods as a visual metaphor?

2. What do you hope to accomplish with your photography in the next few years?

To finish my degree, now 95% complete, to be able to move on and follow my inclination for combining narratives from my subconscious with images from the conscious world. I would like to publish other visual stories.

3. Is this an ongoing or completed project?

It will be completed soon when I publish a book with the images and accompanying poetry that I have written, that completes the signposting for the narrative.

4. Do you consider yourself a… photographer?

advanced

5. What genres of photography do you work in (mark all that apply)

fine art, documentary, imaginative storytelling

Reviewer Portfolio Feedback  26.4.24

Hi Niki-

It isn’t happenstance that you are using a forest as a metaphor for community. Fungi, aspen groves and many tree species are known to have elaborate networks of communication that bind them together. Not to mention all the other small organisms that make up the ecosystem that sustains the life of what we are seeing in your photographs. You pull any single member of the community out, and the whole forest suffers. Despite that the knowledge is out there for humans to make sense of it all, we continue to make the same, irreversible mistakes, over and over. And this project brings these questions, and more, to my mind. 

In response to your request for feedback, I am still a little confused by the overarching idea that you are going for. If what I have said above rings with you, I think it would be helpful to state it somewhat directly and concisely. For example, instead of saying “The photography transforms abstract ideas in my head, into something concrete,” and defining your work as a “conceptual project,” I would simply say “”What Lies Within” uses the forest landscape of [name the forest] as a metaphor for human communities and civilization.” Or something like that. 

That being said, I still want to understand how you see human communities as stark contrasts to this forest communities, but are using the forests as a metaphor for the human communities. Perhaps they are not a “metaphor” but a “model?” In other words, are you suggesting that these woodland spaces are a model for what it means to be a part of a community and to live in an ecosystem where all things must coexist and support each other’s life processes? Again, I am very interested in the ideas. I just think it’s a question of being clear and concise: especially when submitting to a contest like this where jurors have so little time to spend with each submission/statement. 

I also don’t know if you need to include the words with their definitions beneath the photographs. I think you can say everything in the statement and then rely on the viewer’s intellect to realize that what they are seeing are prime examples of what those words represent. Perhaps you can include those exact words in your statement and then give an example of how that plays out in the woodland environments. But my sense is that this project could exist as two separate entities: image and text. 

Otherwise, I haven’t talked about the images themselves. And I personally find myself getting lost in the beautiful, dense, and elaborate spaces you are creating/seeing. The compositions are complex, often surprising, and always seductive. These are hard landscapes to render, and it feels like you have an eye for figuring them out. 

It’s a pleasure to discover this series, Niki. Wishing you the best of luck. 

I responded:

My learning

The review was extremely useful, especially as I had woven parts of my draft PDF into (I used it as additional feedback for A1), it and it gave me some points to consider and edit for that and further reviews.

I heard much later (14.6.24) that my work had not been selected by the judges, but it had been another useful learning curve for me to submit with new criteria and purpose.

COMPETITION ENTRY

  1. TREES ONLINE EXHIBITION COMPETITION: A.Smith Gallery- Deadline: March 18, 2024

This was my first competition entry. I chose this competition because of the subject matter, though I was hesitant as there was no request for information about the work and images submitted were treated as single images, rather than a series.

The call was for photographers of all levels to submit work reflecting the theme “trees” to A Smith Gallery by March 18, 2024. Exhibition Dates | April 12 to May 23, 2024: https://asmithgallery.com/exhibitions/trees-5/ – Online Gallery and a reception. The entry fee for 5 images was $40 and I paid $20 as well to have a 30 minute post competition review with the gallery directors.

The Juror for “trees” was Wendi Schneider, Denver based photographer, and artist, widely known for her luminous gold leafed influenced by a background in painting and art history, Schneider layers oils on her photographs to manipulate the boundaries between the real and the imagined. I realised the importance of researching the jurors after the competition was judged, as all images chosen were akin to her artistic style.

Though I was not chosen for the exhibition it was good that I entered and went through the process for the first time. I had to conform with the submission guidelines: Digital images should be up to 1800 pixels on the longest side saved in JPEG format at 72 ppi. Each image should be labelled with consecutive numbers followed by your name, i.e. 1FirstName_LastName.jpg. The number should correspond with the number on the application form.  This I navigated successfully.

I selected 5 images for submission that could stand alone, and then for the review they asked for a further 5 images.

My notes from the verbal review of my work:

  • Images submitted all strong, quality excellent
  • They awaken your senses

They asked for my questions:

  • I asked how to submit when you are working from a body of Work and yet only single images are asked for with no opportunity for context. They suggested look carefully at the jurors, as jurors often selects work of her own type, but this is not always the case. Sometimes jurors will select work different to their own as a change.
  • I asked if Jurors see titles. They said in their case no, they number them, but that where are used titles work well. I think if I was submitting with no context in future I would add a signposting title.
  • I asked what genre they see my work as. They said, fine art, though they said that increasingly fine art photography is defined by post production changes…

They suggested to look to enter competitions which call for Bodies of work, or at least those that ask for artist statements as my story is strong and important.

They also advised that I shouldn’t be put off putting my work out there for the same reason. I discussed my concern that because of the sensitive nature of my work, I don’t want to share my work locally, so maybe I should share away from here in some way.

I asked for advice on how to gain feedback and of course they said by portfolio reviews. They suggested I might try:

  • The Los ángeles Centre for Photography
  • The Carmel Center for Photographic Art – Anne Jastrab
  • The Griffin Museum
  • Photo fest
  • Atlanta photography group.

My concern remains how to do this with minimal financial investment as I am not aiming to take the work forwards after SYP.

  • I asked about how to contact other photographers who submitted for feedback/support. They advised that some have websites, or to google, or to use Instagram. They will add the contact details/websites to the winning gallery images, so I will contact one or two of those whose work I like, as a way of networking. Those I thought would be of interest were David Lang, Leslie Giem and Ann Milne. However, having researched their work it isn’t relevant to my project, concept or style. I

Reviewing the artists chosen I made a note of:

  • Ann Milne / Oasis in the Redwood Forest, Rotorua, New Zealand / annwebbphotography.com, though After research she is a ‘straightforward’ landscape photographer from New Zealand, her competition image is unlike any of her other work.
  • David Lang / Spreading Wings / the 27 / davidglangphotography.com, Some tree images – all I phone work
  • Leslie Gleim / New Life, Ohia Tree / lesliegleim.com- Beautiful work but not relevant to my work

Although thought the gallery owners reviewing was weak, I did gain some insights into how to choose what to submit to and how. It was also a good practice run for me and I lerant to have pertinent questions ready.

I will watch out for the Gallery Talk with the gallery directors discussing all 55 images.  The Gallery Talk will be posted in the blog section of the website. The online exhibition as well as the GalleryTalk will be permanently archived after the end of the exhibition: trees (2024) At: https://asmithgallery.com/exhibitions/trees-5/ (Accessed 10/04/2024).