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2025 MULLINS CONCEPTUAL PHOTOGRAPHY PRIZE

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2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Priz

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2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize

Muswellbrook Regional Art Centre   14 August – 11 October 2025

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The Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize seeks artist entities that challenge the viewer via the illustration of a concept rather than being merely illustrative or representational.

The work must be primarily photographic but not to the exclusion of mixed media and three dimensional objects.

The Australian Photographic Society’s Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize is a national $30,000 acquisitive prize that seeks to find Australia’s best conceptual photographic works. Finalists of the prize are exhibited annually at Muswellbrook Regional Arts Centre with the prize-winning work joining the Muswellbrook Shire Art Collection, and a collection of contemporary photographic works acquired through the Muswellbrook Photographic Award (1987 – 2014). Means of work presentation are unrestricted, inviting photographers to illustrate the intent of their works through a myriad of mediums.

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Antares Wells Assistant Curator MCA  PHOTO: liya Cohen Headshots

ABOUT THE ADJUDICATOR  (From the APS Instagram)

This year’s sole adjudicator is Antares Wells, Assistant Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. Antares is a curator and writer with a specialisation in photography. Previously, she was Curator at the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, and Curatorial Assistant in the Department of Photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.

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THE 30 FINALISTS  (Selected from 366 entries)

Images supplied by the Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize. “Click” on the image to enlarge entry and to see maker and title.

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Antares Wells announces the Prize-cropped

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THE ADJUDICATOR’S ADDRESS AND PRIZE ANNOUNCEMENT

Good afternoon everyone, and thank you all for coming. It’s wonderful to see so many people here celebrating contemporary photography. My name is Antares Wells and I am Assistant Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia. It’s an honour to have been invited by the Australian Photographic Society to judge the 2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize and I am thrilled to be here with you today. I’d like to acknowledge the Wonnarua people as the traditional custodians of the lands on which we are gathering tonight and I pay my respects to elders past, present and emerging.

This year’s Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize received hundreds of entries from across the country and I am delighted to have selected 30 finalists for this exhibition. The work presented here spans the breadth of contemporary photographic practice in Australia.

Artists Justine Roche, Nicholas Hubicki, Claire Paul and Isabella Capezio engage thoughtfully with the natural environment and its relationship to photography, presenting work that reflects a deep consideration of materials. Works by Carolyn Craig, Shea Kirk and David Rosetzky critically consider the body, desire and the self. Artists Mungo Howard, Angus Brown, Lisa Stonham and Annabelle McEwen mine the relationships between photography and other media, such as painting and sculpture, encouraging us to think critically about what a photograph is.

Works by Skye Wagner, Claudia Nicholson, Darron Davies and Callan Skimin reframe existing found and archival imagery, creating new image worlds in the process that harness the photograph’s associative power. Artists Jeremy Drape, Jessie Turner and Julie Purdie experiment with perception and the capacity of the lens to frame a world.

Works by Dylan Marriott, George Angelovski, Kathy Mackey, and Tamara Voninski experiment with colour and form, while artists Izabela Pluta and Yvette Hamilton consider sites of photographic history and practice through formally ambitious works. Finally, Miho Watanabe, Hilary Wardhaugh, Ali Tahayori, Lilah Benetti, and Minami Ivory explore memory, trauma, loss, and possible futures, in quietly affecting and powerful ways.

For those of you drawn to processes of technical experimentation, you are in for a treat. We have artists who are working in new ways with historical processes, such as salt prints, wet collodion and opalotypes; we have artists inventing new processes, such as ‘chemography’; and we have artists working critically with new technologies such as 3D printing, moulding, and Artificial Intelligence.

As you can imagine, with this group of finalists it was incredibly difficult to identify a winner, and I thank Elissa, Brian and Roger for their patience over the past 48 hours!

Johanna Ng – a woman wearing a choker is walking in a crowd, 2024

I am delighted to announce that the winner of the 2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize is Johanna Ng, for her work a woman wearing a choker is walking in a crowd (2024). Drawn from her broader body of work every asian in sex and the city, Johanna’s work utilises screenshots of Asian extras in the TV show, often glimpsed in the background. Johanna writes in her statement: I “photographed the extras in new compositions” and then “fed these compositions through Google’s image-to-text and then text-to-image AI engines. Ultimately, an image of an Asian woman becomes ‘a woman’ and the text ‘a woman’ conjures the image of a white one.”

Johanna’s work is visually compelling and turns on its ability to make you stop, look, and then look again. There’s a dimensionality to it best experienced in person, which gives form to questions of visibility, erasure, and the biases structuring the image and text generation systems that are increasingly shaping how we see, think and behave. Congratulations, Johanna!

I am also pleased to award two works as Highly Commended:

Mungo Howard – Studio Window, 2025

Congratulations to Mungo Howard for his work Studio Window (2025), a beautiful work hovering somewhere between painting, sculpture and photography, turning on the power of introspection.

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Miho Watanabe – Awareness of Between-ness A Day After My Father’s Departure – Self-Portrait in His Room on His Chair, 2025

Congratulations to Miho Watanabe for his work Awareness of Betweenness: A Day after My Father’s Departure – Self-Portrait in His Room on His Chair (2025), a quietly affecting meditation on memory, grief and the passage of time.

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Congratulations to all of the finalists, and thank you again to Muswellbrook Regional Arts Centre and the Australian Photographic Society for having me as this year’s judge.

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The Adjudicator Antares Wells with the winning entry

The Adjudicator Antares Wells with the winning entry

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SOME DOCUMENTATION OF THE EXHIBITION OPENING EVENT

“Click” on the image to enlarge and see the caption.

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SPONSORS OF THE MCPP

The 2025 Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize is made possible by the Australian Photographic Society in partnership with the Muswellbrook Regional Arts Centre, and with the support of Bengalla Mining Company, MACH Energy, Malabar Coal, AGL Hunter, and Australian Photography Magazine.

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SEE OUR BLOG POST FOR THE

2023 MULLINS CONCEPTUAL PHOTOGRAPHY PRIZE

“Click” the link HERE

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POSTSCRIPT: THE WINNER JOHANNA NG VISITS EXHIBITION

Johanna Ng+Roger Skinner with Max Watters’ statue PHOTO: Andrew

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Mullins poster

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Adjudicator’s address ©Antares Wells
All photographs of the MCPP exhibition at the Muswellbrook Regional Art Centre are ©Doug Spowart

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100 AUSTRALIAN WOMEN PHOTOGRAPHERS: Loud+Luminous-2020

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LOUD & LUMINOUS – 100 Australian Women Photographers 

The backstory from the L&L Founders, Hilary Wardhaugh & Melissa Anderson

The Loud & Luminous mission is to recognise and celebrate the contribution of contemporary women in the photographic arts in Australia. We believe this project is unique and important in recognising the extensive cultural contribution women photographic artists and photographers have made in this country.

This project is designed to empower the girls and women of today and tomorrow to chase in their dreams. This will always be a timely project and one that hopes will help educate and inspire many women of all ages.

​The 2020 theme of ‘EQUALITY’ echoes the United Nations sustainable development goals of ‘gender equality’, and we very much look forward to seeing work that reflects that goal and our theme.

 

Late in 2019 a call went out to female photographers of any age throughout Australia to submit an image for consideration to be selected for the 3rd LOUD & LUMINOUS exhibition at Sydney’s CONTACT SHEET GALLERY and book. The photographers whose images were successful were:

L&L Selected photographers 2020

Loud & Luminous selected photographers 2020

 

Due to COVID-19 the exhibition at Contact Sheet Gallery has been postponed. However over the next 3 months they will post works on the gallery’s online blog. ‘CLICK’ HERE!

 

Once again we were excited that images by both Victoria and Ruby were successful…

 

 

VICTORIA COOPER

Victoria Cooper: Portrait…..PHOTO:Doug Spowart

Victoria’s Artist’s Statement: All things have significance

All things have significance … sentient or not … organic or inorganic… a rich environment of diversity, differentiation and divergence.

The inspiration, like a ray of light through dark clouds, to create this image arises from the women that have, at great personal cost through leadership in research, writing and sheer passion, fought discrimination, voicelessness and political power structures to make a difference in the ongoing quest to create a sustainable and healthy planet. Among these women are: American Rachel Carson, Australian Mary E. White and Swedish schoolgirl Greta Thunberg.

 

All things have significance ….. PHOTO: Victoria Cooper

 

 

 

RUBY SPOWART

Ruby Spowart …. Photographer unkown

Ruby’s Artist’s Statement …. EQUALITY: Beauty in Aging

Some may say that only in youth there is beauty – as I witness in the unfolding of a fresh new orchid flower. But as I watched the flower each day, its beautiful strong colourful presence began to loose its vigour and the colours began to slowly fade. In the last stages of its life it turned a deep reddish tan almost gold.

Its youthful form no longer evident but now wrinkled and withered it has a different kind of elegance – an equality of beauty…

 

Ruby’s EQUALITY: Beauty in Aging

 

 

 

Hilary Wardhaugh & Melissa Anderson wish to acknowledge.

Hilary Wardhaugh + Mel Anderson

Hilary Wardhough + Melissa Anderson

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In 2018 our wonderfully supportive sponsors included: Fujifilm Australia, Kayell Australia, Momento Pro, Victorian Women’s Trust, Creative Women’s Circle and Damian Caniglia Photography and Video. In 2019 we again secured Fujifilm Australia, Kayell Australia, Momento Pro, and Damian Caniglia Photography/Video. We also added Print2Metal and Amanda Summons (book designer) as sponsors.

In 2020 we added PPIB Photographers Insurance as a new sponsor. We were also very fortunate to have Paul McDonald at CONTACT SHEET Gallery as our Exhibition partner, too.

The 2019 and 2020 we held International Women’s Day Symposia in Canberra that were both sold out and received extremely well. We are also proud to say that the 2018 and 2019 Loud & Luminous books have been accepted into the National Library of Australia’s collection.

In 2020 we also saw the results of the stipend raised by the IWD 2019 ticket sales in a group exhibition with Suellen Cook, Tamara Whyte, Helga Salwe, Tricia King and Elise Searson at Photoaccess in Canberra.

 

 

The 2020 L&L book

BUY A COPY OF THE 2020 L&L book HERE

(Order before 30 June 2020)

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Both Victoria and Ruby have been selected in earlier LOUD & LUMINOUS exhibitions

Victoria Cooper (left) ………………………………………………………………………………Ruby Spowart (right)

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IN 2019  – ‘Click’ link to see the post

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Victoria Cooper  L&L entry 2018

In 2018  – ‘Click’ link to see the post

 

 

 

 

Looking forward to the next LOUD & LUMINOUS exhibition in 2021 …

 

 

Written by Cooper+Spowart

May 16, 2020 at 3:21 pm

Posted in Exhibitions, Speaking on Photography, Victoria Cooper

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