Photography 4 Humanity/Fotografiska Global Prize 2026
Deadline: Jul 12, 2026
other
unfunded
Opportunity Overview
📖 About
Photography 4 Humanity, in partnership with the world-renowned photography museum Fotografiska, has launched HOME, a global open call inviting photographers everywhere to explore one of the most universal—and most fragile—ideas of our time.
In a world shaped by climate disruption, conflict, migration, and displacement, HOME asks emerging artists to capture what home means today: a place of safety, belonging, identity, memory, or loss.
Sponsor Organization
- United Nations Human Rights
🎁 Benefits
- Selected photographs will be exhibited at United Nations Headquarters in New York on Human Rights Day, December 10, 2026, in Gallery A—one of the UN’s most prominent public spaces.
- The exhibition will be guest curated by legendary documentary photographer James Nachtwey.
- The photographs will also be shared globally through UN.org, bringing the meaning of home into the heart of the international human rights conversation.
✅ Requirements
- Images should reflect on safety, belonging, dignity, identity, and place.
- Photographs should explore the theme through personal, documentary, or conceptual perspectives.
- Open to photographers from anywhere in the world.
📅 Application Date and Process
- Application Deadline: 12 July, 2026
- Interested photographers can apply via the official application website.
🌟 Ideal Candidate
The ideal candidate is a photographer who:
- Is passionate about exploring the meaning of home in the context of climate disruption, displacement, and migration.
- Can creatively capture themes of identity, memory, and loss through their lens.
📌 Contact Information
For more details, visit the official website of Photography 4 Humanity.
Benefits
- Selected photographs will be exhibited at United Nations Headquarters in New York on Human Rights Day, December 10, 2026, in Gallery A—one of the UN’s most prominent public spaces.
- The exhibition will be guest curated by legendary documentary photographer James Nachtwey.
- The exhibition will be shared globally through UN.org, bringing the meaning of home into the heart of the international human rights conversation.



