Unlike many recipients of the grant, American documentary photographer and 2018 winner Laura Morton used the grant to pursue a new story: University Avenue explored two neighbouring communities in California's Bay Area separated by a stark wealth gap.
"I'd had the idea for a while, but I knew it was a complicated project that would take a long time," says Laura, who shot much of University Avenue on a Canon EOS R with a Canon RF 35mm F1.8 MACRO IS STM lens. "The grant gave me the financial freedom to carve out that time. Time to work is a gift for a documentary photographer, and a grant allows for deeper and more subtle stories to develop.
"When it comes to entering, decide what's unique about your voice and story. This is a tough business, but having unique ideas goes a long way." Laura focuses on economics and wealth. Her images have appeared in publications including National Geographic, Marie Claire, Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times.
At the time of applying in 2022, Paris-based documentary photographer Natalya Saprunova felt discouraged as a photojournalist. The subjects of her stories were set in Russian territory and, as the war in Ukraine was becoming more and more impactful, the press were refusing to publish her work. But she continued to believe in herself despite current events overshadowing her long-term stories she was working on.
"I applied at the moment when I had completed the first chapter of my work on the Saami people in Russia and the loss of their nomadic lifestyle due to forced settlement during the Soviet era. My advice: apply, even if you have doubts, thinking that the work isn’t “ready” or “good enough”. Take the chance to work on the application, it helps to refine your project and to move forward," she enthuses. Natalya now focuses on societal issues related to environmental and climate crises, especially related to the permafrost thaw across the far north. Her pictures have appeared in publications including Washington Post, Geo, Le Figaro, The Guardian, Le Pèlerin, Corriera Della Sera, The Globe and Mail.
For Axelle de Russé, being selected as Canon Female Photojournalist in 2007 for her photo story on concubines in China proved to be a pivotal moment in her career.
"Receiving the grant was, for me, a source of enormous pressure, but so instructive," she says. "It was the trigger, the founding moment of my career. Every story I produce today is based on the steps and initiatives I took at that time. It taught me how to build a story."
In 2014, she followed the daily lives of sexual violence victims in the French army, and since 2016 has been documenting the consequences of global warming in the Arctic.
"I'll always view this grant as special: it carried me forward and pushed me to continue; it gave me the confidence to become the photographer I am today."