Announced today by the National Portrait Gallery, the portrait, titled Ruby (left view), is half of a stereoscopic pair from Kirk’s ongoing series Vantages.
“Over the past 6 years I have been inviting people over to my home studio to sit in front of simple backdrops and make portraits,” Kirk said. “This portrait is of my now good friend Emma, which we made together during our first meeting. I wanted to create the idea of the body as a record. We are our faces as much as we are our limbs, extremities, our nooks and crannies. The self and sense of a person in a portrait for me is often thought of more than just a face and hands, it’s an essence of the whole,” Shea said.
Shea Kirk takes home $30,000 cash from the National Portrait Gallery and $20,000 worth of Canon equipment thanks to Imaging Partner Canon Australia.
Emma Armstrong-Porter (she/they), who is also an NPPP finalist, said Shea’s portrait reflects their changing attitude to their body and how it fits within society. “I’ve always struggled with the size of my body, from being extremely underweight to now being overweight. Over the past few years working with other photographers, making portraits, I’ve been processing my feelings about the transformation. I’m starting to feel more at home in my big queer body,” Armstrong-Porter said.
2023 NPPP Judges - National Portrait Gallery Senior Curator Joanna Gilmour, Daniel Boetker-Smith, Director of the Centre for Contemporary Photography, and critically acclaimed photo media artist Tamara Dean, said the work was a “celebration of photography.”
“While Shea makes the portrait look effortless, this is a masterful and technically complex work where the sitter has no self-consciousness. It is as if the artist and sitter are participating equally in the transaction,” judges said.
Renae Saxby was awarded the Highly Commended prize, for her work Bangardidjan 2022, a photo of proud Kine, Rembarrnga, and Dalabon women Cindy Rostron on the road in remote Central Arnhem Land. Rostron is photographed in the family car with a buffalo skull painted by her father Victor Rostron strapped to the roof. Renae’s prize is a ColorEdge CG2700S 27” monitor valued at almost $4,000 courtesy of EIZO,
Judges said the work had “exceptional cinematic quality, encapsulating an entire story, and while there is so much to see from a narrative point of view, it is the sitters gaze which draws you in.”