The exhibition
Arnold Newman Prize 2025 at The Griffin Museum brings together a compelling selection of photographers who redefine contemporary portraiture through bold vision and intimate storytelling. At the center of the show is C. Rose Smith, the 2025 Prize winner, whose series
Scenes of Self: Redressing Patriarchy reclaims historical space — exploring the architecture of the American South and the legacy of power, identity, and visibility for Black communities. Her work challenges traditional gaze and offers a powerful re-imagining of Black identity through a lens of agency and authority.
Smith’s photographs draw upon archive materials and new portraits to examine how power and perspective intertwine. Through careful framing and thoughtful staging, she reveals the lingering social hierarchies embedded in place and memory. Her images demand attention — not only to what is visible, but to what has been invisible for generations. In doing so, she pushes portraiture into a new direction, one conscious of history, identity, and reclamation.
Alongside Smith’s work, the exhibition features three finalists whose practices bring fresh voices and urgent perspectives to photographic portraiture. Debmalya Choudhuri uses a deeply personal, diaristic approach. Through their portraits, texts, and performance-inflected images, they confront grief, trauma, and mental health — transforming pain into visual testimony. Their work emphasizes vulnerability and resilience, inviting empathy and introspection from viewers.
Nzingah Oyo explores identity, heritage, and family through a long-term portrait series that traces her large Brooklyn family over decades. Working in classic format, she captures generational shifts, cultural convergence, and the complexities of community. Her images offer a quiet power — a celebration of Black life, pride, and continuity. Jahbella Demavlys, recognized with the inaugural Richards Family Prize, brings a global sensibility rooted in her international background and documentary approach. Her photography bridges fashion, portraiture, and documentary work to highlight the dignity and diversity of her subjects, offering international vision and human stories.
Together, the four artists showcased in
Arnold Newman Prize 2025 expand the boundaries of what portraiture can be — from historical reclamation to personal grief, from family narratives to global identity. Their works remind us that portraiture is not just representation, but reflection: of power, memory, resilience, and the stories that shape who we are.
Image:
C. Rose Smith, Scenes of Self: Redressing Patriarchy. 2025 Prize winner © C. Rose Smith