2019 : 05 May Alex Mao Photo Award

Amie Kaufman; Light Up The Night; To think I had so many pretty lights sitting on my doorstep...
Amie Kaufman; Precipitation; This image I took by using a cut out of a portrait from one of my previous shoots and placed it behind a sheet of plastic with water droplets on it. This has been by far my favorite Photo shoot.
Jeremy Chi; Cross Street Rainy Night ;A moment of loneliness when the city falls asleep in rain.
Jeremy Chi; Sunset at the Wharf; A snapshot of people walking against the light from the setting sun.
Jeremy Chi; Muriwai and a Couple; The sea and the beach belonged to them.
Paul Samson; Onzo Bike; I saw the Onzo Bike looking kind of cute against the early morning view of the marina and Rangitoto
Zhi Xuan Lin; Electronic screen; Seeing with screen, without eyes.
Zhi Xuan Lin; Home; Grandfather's Water bottle, forever.
Zhi Xuan Lin; Flower of evil; Beauty is like a flower in the dawn
Jasmine Tuia; mānava (1); Manava   has multiple meanings associated with the physical, and the spiritual politics of the body, specifically the Samoan/Oceanic body. 

The term translates to stomach, which points to the mid area of the body where we breathe and give/hold life. Manava also means ‘to breathe’. Within the term, there’s further phrases that connects the physical body to the environment or space (nature) and to the spiritual world. ‘Mana’ refers to the spirit/energy held within our bodies, and ‘Va’ speaks to the in between space(s)/energies of the physical and the spiritual realms. These photographs represent the self determination of the Pacific body, specifically my own, as a Samoan womxn in this political, environmental and social climate.
Jasmine Tuia;mānava (2); Manava   has multiple meanings associated with the physical, and the spiritual politics of the body, specifically the Samoan/Oceanic body. The term translates to stomach, which points to the mid area of the body where we breathe and give/hold life. Manava also means ‘to breathe’. Within the term, there’s further phrases that connects the physical body to the environment or space (nature) and to the spiritual world. ‘Mana’ refers to the spirit/energy held within our bodies, and ‘Va’ speaks to the in between space(s)/energies of the physical and the spiritual realms. These photographs represent the self determination of the Pacific body, specifically my own, as a Samoan womxn in this political, environmental and social climate.
Jasmine Tuia; mānava (3); Manava   has multiple meanings associated with the physical, and the spiritual politics of the body, specifically the Samoan/Oceanic body. The term translates to stomach, which points to the mid area of the body where we breathe and give/hold life. Manava also means ‘to breathe’. Within the term, there’s further phrases that connects the physical body to the environment or space (nature) and to the spiritual world. ‘Mana’ refers to the spirit/energy held within our bodies, and ‘Va’ speaks to the in between space(s)/energies of the physical and the spiritual realms. These photographs represent the self determination of the Pacific body, specifically my own, as a Samoan womxn in this political, environmental and social climate.

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