By NPG: The National Portrait Gallery is to stage the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2021 exhibition at Cromwell Place, a new arts hub in South Kensington, London from the 10 November 2021 until 2 January 2022, while the Gallery’s building in St Martin’s Place is closed until 2023 for major redevelopment works.
The announcement comes as the Gallery invites submissions for the international photographic portrait competition from Wednesday 21 April until 17.00 on Tuesday 8 June 2021.
The exhibition at Cromwell Place will be the first new major exhibition staged exclusively by the National Portrait Gallery since works began on the Gallery’s transformational Inspiring People project in Summer 2020.
Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2020 was shown as a virtual exhibition on the Gallery’s website. During closure, the Gallery has organised a number of exhibitions in partnership with other museums and galleries, including Cecil Beaton’s Bright Young Things at Sheffield’s Millennium Gallery and Tudors to Windsors: British Royal Portraits at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, both due to open in May this year. The Gallery is also continuing to loan portraits through a major programme of activities across the UK, including the Coming Home initiative, which sees portraits of iconic individuals from the Collection traveling to the towns and cities most closely associated with their subjects.
The Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize celebrates and promotes the very best in contemporary portrait photography. The competition is open to everyone aged 18 and over from around the world. Photographers are encouraged to interpret ‘portrait’ in its widest sense, with ‘photography focused on portraying people with an emphasis on their identity as individuals.’ The winner of the competition will receive £15.000, with second prize receiving £3.000 and third prize £2.000.
The National Portrait Gallery’s Photographic Portrait Prize, sponsored by international law firm Taylor Wessing since 2008, is one of the most competitive photography awards in the world and showcases the work of some of the most exciting and cutting-edge contemporary photographers. Since the international competition began in 1993, it has established a reputation for creativity and excellence, with works submitted by a range of photographers, from leading professionals to talented amateurs and the most exciting emerging artists.
The Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2020 was won by Alys Tomlinson for Lost Summer, her series of black and white portraits of London school leavers dressed up for their proms, which were cancelled due to the Coronavirus pandemic.
Second prize was awarded to Lydia Goldblatt for Eden, a portrait of her young daughter alone in her garden during lockdown. Yolanda Y. Liou was awarded third prize for her portrait of model, plus size advocate and Instagram influencer, Enam Ewura Adjoa Asiama.
The online exhibition featured 54 portraits from 37 different artists and was viewed by over 135.000 users.
To enter the 2021 competition photographers are required to upload their image(s) via: Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2021
All images will be viewed anonymously by a panel of judges who will collectively select the prize winners and works for exhibition.
For the seventh year running, entrants to the competition are being encouraged to submit works as a series, either a group of individual portraits based on a particular theme, or two or more photographs that form a single portrait when shown together, in addition to stand-alone portraits. One series of photographs submitted to the competition may be chosen by the judges to be exhibited in its entirety.
by Alain Chivilò