Photo series capturing indigenous experience of water shortage in the face of climate change wins prestigious Sony World Photography Award

on
14 April 2023
British Journal of Photography x WaterAid: Miruku- Monty Kaplan and Marisol Mendez 2022
Image: British Journal of Photography x WaterAid: Miruku- Monty Kaplan and Marisol Mendez 2022

Download Press PackRenowned photographers, Monty Kaplan and Marisol Mendez, received international recognition for their multi-layered representation ‘Miruku’ of the water crisis impacting the lives of the indigenous Wayuu people of Pesuapa, in Colombia, commissioned by WaterAid and British Journal of Photography.

Announced at an awards ceremony at the Hilton Park Lane Hotel in London on 13 April, ‘Miruku’ was crowned the winning gallery of the competitive Climate-Professional category. As a result, the images will go on to be shown as part of the Sony World Photography Awards exhibition at Somerset House, running from 14 April - 1 May 2023. 

‘Miruku’ focuses on the Wayuus, Colombia’s largest indigenous group totalling around 300,000 people, who live in the coastal desert region of La Guajira. Prolonged droughts, less frequent rains, and poor maintenance of existing wells are likely to worsen their access to water. The project, commissioned by WaterAid and British Journal of Photography, examines how a combination of climate change issues and human negligence have led to communities experiencing extreme water shortage.  

British Journal of Photography x WaterAid: Miruku- Monty Kaplan and Marisol Mendez 2022
Image: British Journal of Photography x WaterAid: Miruku- Monty Kaplan and Marisol Mendez 2022

In November 2021, the storytelling duo Monty Kaplan and Marisol Mendez captured the lives of Wayuu communities and their fight for access to clean, safe water. The duo’s contrasting aesthetics echoed the diverse and delicate realities of the communities they encountered.  

Kaplan and Mendez (originally from Argentina and Bolivia, respectively) spent much of their time in Pesuapa, home to just over 100 Wayuu people. WaterAid Colombia has been working closely with the community to address the ongoing crisis and the photographers explored the water issue, and particularly how the worsening crisis impacts women.  

British Journal of Photography x WaterAid: Miruku- Monty Kaplan and Marisol Mendez 2022
Image: British Journal of Photography x WaterAid: Miruku- Monty Kaplan and Marisol Mendez 2022

Upon receiving the Sony World Photography Award, Marisol Mendez said: 

“Monty and I are so incredibly thrilled to have won this award! The recognition for our photography, and this project in particular, means everything to us.  

This award is not only for us, but for those inspirational Wayuu women whose strength and dignity shone through in our images. In the face of extreme climate-driven water scarcity, they’re still so powerful, determined and resilient.” 

Monty Kaplan agreed, and explained the concept of the photo series: 

“It was important for us to frame the story around a female perspective to get a better understanding of how gender inequality and climate vulnerability interrelate. Women have a challenging time managing water for their families – gathering the water, cleaning clothes and cooking.  

We sought to spotlight the strength and resourcefulness of the Wayuu women. We found it inspiring that they were the community leaders, teachers and climate activists; despite living in such extreme conditions. We’d like to thank the Wayuu for allowing us to spend an unforgettable time with them to understand how communities can begin to flourish, once a reliable source of water is available to them.”  

Laura Summerton, Photography Manager at WaterAid said:  

“Monty and Marisol’s project Miruku absolutely deserves this award and the huge recognition that comes with it - we’re delighted for them. This commission is part of our ambition to bring global water stories to the forefront and to demonstrate in diverse and engaging ways how the climate crisis is having an immense impact on millions of lives, especially women and girls. 

By combining their individual approaches, often into diptychs, Kaplan and Mendez intentionally challenge one-dimensional representations of people and situations. Instead, they ask the viewer to consider multiple narratives about their subjects: people are faced with circumstances beyond their control, like drought, and at the same time are active agents of change in their community, protecting and fighting for their right to water.” 

Working closely with local communities, WaterAid installed a filtering system, handwashing and drinking facilities and a place to bathe, providing women and girls with a more private place for menstrual hygiene. Continuing to give a platform to those with lived experience on the frontline of climate change, the leader of the community in Pesuapa, Isolina Silva, who is featured in the photo series, spoke at a WaterAid session during last year’s World Water Week, the leading annual event on global water issues.  

Find out more here.

ENDS 

Download Press Pack  For more information and high-resolution images, please contact: 

Abigail Smith, Senior Media Officer [email protected]; or call our after-hours press line on +44 (0)7887 521 552, or email [email protected]

Notes to editors: 

 Wayuu communities in Colombia struggle with the access to safe water, food and health services. On average, one child under the age of five dies of malnutrition1 every week, often in combination with diseases caused by a lack of safe water.  A 2020 Human Rights Watch investigation2 found 96% of people living in rural La Guajira lack reliable access to potable water. The lack of nutritious food paired with the water crisis results in high malnutrition rates, diarrhoeal diseases and child mortality.  

WaterAid x 1854 - The Climate Commission

In collaboration with British Journal of Photography, WaterAid commissioned three new photographic projects exploring the ways in which the climate crisis is making it harder for people to access their basic human rights of clean water, decent sanitation and personal hygiene — especially in some of the world’s poorest countries. 

About Monty Kaplan and Marisol Mendez

Federico “Monty” Kaplan (b. 1986) is a photographer from Argentina, who is interested in photography as a tool of inspection. He examines and questions the perception we have of reality. Exploring intersubjective spaces that are shaped from the relationship between our subjective experiences and the objective nature of things. Kaplan searches for what is invisible to the eye and exists only as presentiment. His background in filmmaking allows him to create unorthodox narratives filled with atmosphere that blur the line between fiction and documentary.  

Monty has exhibited widely with shows in USA, London, Germany and Argentina. His project The Measure was selected to be a part of the FOLIO masterclass with PHMuseum and Witty Books. His work has appeared on numerous publications, including It’s Nice That and i-D, among others. 

WebsiteInstagramMarisol Mendez (1991) is a Bolivian photographer that uses the camera to study the tension between truth and fiction, the tight relationship between what a photograph creates and the (sur)real it comes from. Through her photographs she seeks to deconstruct hegemonic narratives and confront them with the friction of the heterogeneous. Marisol employs a broad range of visual language to tell a story. The mixture yields an experience similar to that of a mystical journey where the viewer is challenged to absorb and reflect on the links that emerge across the images. As a result, her work oscillates between candid and staged, naturalistic and mythical.  

WebsiteInstagramAbout British Journal of Photography

 British Journal of Photography is the world’s longest-running photography title (est. 1854). Published monthly, the magazine takes an international, cutting-edge perspective on contemporary photography. Stories are uploaded daily to 1854.photography.  

1854 Media’s internationally renowned photography awards include: the BJP International Photography Award, Female in Focus, a platform for under-represented female photographers, Portrait of Britain™ and Portrait of Humanity™, which celebrate diversity and are the two most viewed photographic exhibitions in history, reaching a combined audience of 50M+ people.  

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 WaterAid is working to make clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene normal for everyone, everywhere within a generation. The international not-for-profit organisation works in 28 countries to change the lives of the poorest and most marginalised people. Since 1981, WaterAid has reached 28 million people with clean water and 29 million people with decent toilets. 

For more information, visit our website wateraid.org/uk, follow us on Twitter @WaterAidUK@WaterAid or @WaterAidPress, or find us on FacebookLinkedIn or Instagram