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Oleksandr Rupeta: Art + History Competition Second Place Winner
©Oleksandr Rupeta, from the series “Stages of Air,” 2025. An exhausted soldier rests on the ground during intensive pre-combat training, Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine.
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Jared Ragland: Art + History Competition First Place Winner
© Jared Ragland, “Spring Hill, Barbour County, Alabama—Michael Farmer,” 2020, from the ongoing series, “What Has Been Will Be Again.
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BEYOND THE PHOTOGRAPH: Researching Long-Term Projects with Sandy Sugawara and Catiana García-Kilroy
© Sandy Sugawara and United States National Archives, “Loyalty and Character Report” of Sandy Sugawara’s father, Hisashi Sugawara, dated February 26, 1943
Beyond the Photograph is a
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elin o’Hara slavick: Art + Science Competition Honorable Mention
© elin o’Hara slavick, There Have Been 528 Atmospheric Nuclear Tests to Date, 528 photo-chemical drawings on outdated and fogged silver gelatin paper found in the abandoned Sky Atlas
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Nic Umbs: Memento Vitae
©Nic Umbs, Dining Room (Stripped)
This week, we will be exploring projects inspired by memory, place, and/or intimacy.
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Taylor Hedrick: Sun Felt
©Taylor Hedrick, Dad at Bat
This week, we will be exploring projects inspired by memory, place, and/or intimacy. Today, we’ll be looking at Taylor Hedrick’s series Sun Felt.
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Ellen Mahaffy: A Life Undone
©Ellen Mahaffy, Snow pants, 2021
This week, we will be exploring projects inspired by intimacy and memory. Today, we’ll be looking at Ellen Mahaffy’s series A Life Undone.
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Julianne Clark: After Maxine
©Julianne Clark, Portal
This week, we will be exploring projects inspired by intimacy and memory. Today, we’ll be looking at Julianne Clark’s series After Maxine.
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Katie Prock: Yesterday We Were Girls
©Katie Prock, Yesterday We Were Girls
This week, we will be exploring projects inspired by intimacy and memory.
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Artists of Türkiye: Larissa Araz
© Larissa Araz, from Begin to See Through the Darkness
This week artist and curator Mehves Lelic shares the work of artists making work in Türkiye (Turkey)
Larissa Araz’s work is not u -
Interview with Kaitlin Santoro: Memory and Photographic Ephemera
© Kaitlin Santoro, “The side door was left ajar.”, Vitreography
“My work explores time, memory, and impermanence.










