August 19, 2024
We are thrilled to announce that the 2024 PPA Photo Award has been granted to Joyce Ernst for her project
The Uncertainty of Being
Joyce Ernst’s photographs engage a twisted frequency, replete with evocative color and missing information. Her work reifies the dissonance of the human condition.
Joyce lives in Dallas, Texas and graduated from the Maine Media College with a MFA in 2023. Her photographs have been exhibited by Fraction Magazine, F-Stop Magazine online, Photoplace Gallery, the Atlanta Photography Group, Praxis Gallery, the Texas Photographic Society, Dallas Center for Photography, the Stonehenge Gallery online, the Midwest Center for Photography and the Sun Valley Airport Art Committee.
Joyce’s project is featured below, alongside an interview with guest juror Rose Shoshana. Please join us on Tuesday, October 15th, 5:30pm PDT for a virtual artist talk as Joyce presents her award winning project!
Afterimage, 2023
As an adoptee, I understand and experience the world in terms of incomplete information, or what is not known. I am interested in the multiple tensions inherent in this uncertainty: longing and disconnection, curiosity and anxiety, and the resulting thwarted resolution. In many ways it makes sense that I have chosen photography as my artistic medium because there is a relationship between the slipperiness of perception and how I experience the world. A photograph can give the impression of truth and be enigmatic at the same time. A good photograph asks questions. This body of work, The Uncertainty of Being, investigates looking for something that is both ambiguous and specific and always a little out of reach. These photographs were shot in cities, places teeming with people in spaces of visual assault. People are together and alone, seen and unknowable. In shooting this work I relaxed conventions and intentions and just let things fall to chance, and in the process found myself making these cryptic and unsettling visual experiences that are not narrative, but resonate on an emotional level. They exist along the edge between abstraction and figuration, dreams and reality, and knowing and not knowing. This is the emotional landscape that is familiar to me—a puzzling place where people are, for the most part unknowable. With this work, I am challenging the viewer to unravel meaning and also impeding them from doing it. I am asking them to contend with the uncertainty of being.
Evening Commute, 2022
The Ghost of You, 2023
[Rose] I’d be curious to know about your process. Do you go out with a plan in mind or do you allow yourself to ‘meander’ and capture an image that comes to you?
[Joyce]: There is never much of a plan when I go out to take photographs. For me, making images is a way of experiencing the world with curiosity. It starts from a place of mystery. It’s this state of ‘not knowing’ that moves me forward, letting one thing point to the next without a prescribed path. It’s kind of like improv. I’m given something and I say “Yes, and.” I am constantly adjusting to each new piece of information and building on it. It makes sense that this way of working produces photographs that often operate as open metaphors. In that way, the content of the work and my process are aligned.
It really is a process of discovery. Sometimes when I am editing the photographs, it is as if I’m seeing them for the first time. And it is only after I’ve shot and looked at hundreds, or even thousands of images that I begin to see patterns and identify themes in the work.
Echo Chamber, 2023
Love, You’re Not Alone, 2023
[Rose] I’m especially fond of the image of the human in the blue coat and blue trousers next to the bluish image to the right of it. Can you elaborate how the two came together for you?
[Joyce]: Sometimes when I’m shooting in cities, I am leaving a lot of things up to chance. I’m shooting in a way that is in opposition to my formal training--kind of out of control and fast, almost like a dance. But other times I stop and investigate a subject more deliberately, which is what I did here. Many of my images have a tension about them created by an unexpected juxtaposition or a fracturing of the frame. In this particular photograph there is the figure on the left and an advertising screen on the right, and when I shot it, the graphics on the screen were changing with some frequency. I probably began shooting as an investigation of the figure, but in the exploration, I framed the figure in relationship to the screen, which gave me a changing tableau of imagery. Then it was just serendipitous that another figure showed up on the screen.
City Shoal, 2023
Equivocation, 2023
[Rose] Your images strike me as being both abstract and figurative. There’s an emotional resonance to them which is enhanced by your process. Might you elaborate on how you think about the abstract and figurative coming together and creating emotion which is not easy to do.
[Joyce]: I do think the work exists along the edge between abstraction and figuration and I hope that these photographs provoke feelings. So often we see photography within the framework of advertising or the media and it’s easy for our first tendency to be to read a photograph as a description, an external reality. These images contain people, but they are blurred or obscured, and they exist in the context of photographic elements that create tension: fractured frames, unusual cropping, compressed space and saturated color, for example. I think the ways I have used the tools of photography combined with my process of shooting intuitively have helped the photographs to read more like paintings, on an emotional level.
Last Call, 2023
Crosswalks, 2022
[Rose] What is the camera technique used to distort the images?
[Joyce]: The distortions are all created in camera, and often use intentional camera movements of various kinds. Also, I sometimes shoot through translucent surfaces. Very little is done in post, other than color adjustments and occasional cropping.
Between Here and There, 2023
Double Blind, 2023
I Used To Be, 2023
Night Walkers, 2023
Stay, 2023