CFP 15.03.2021

FOMU / Trigger magazine #3 (2021): Care

Antwerpen / Mannheim, 12.03.–21.06.2021
Eingabeschluss : 08.04.2021

Biennale für aktuelle Fotografie

The Biennale für aktuelle Fotografie and the Fotomuseum (FOMU) Antwerp are collaborating on the next issue of Trigger magazine on the theme of "Care". The print publication will be published in November 2021 and will tap into themes of the Biennale 2022, curated by Iris Sikking. All interested parties are invited to submit proposals for a photo and/or text contribution by 8 April 2021. In issuing this call for submissions, Trigger and the Biennale hope to foster collaborative care, both with each other and our contributors.

Who cares? Why do we/they care? What’s your notion of care? Does care for non-human species mean something else? How far does care stretch? And if you care, is it a start for change?

Matters of care are high on the political, and ethical and spiritual agenda. Much focus goes to pre-caring, making sure we can level certain imbalances and injustices in the future. Long-standing conflicts between global and local interests, the growing income gap, the unequal distribution of goods and care have become even more apparent during the pandemic.

Care can be fun. It can be painful. Care is collective, but it can be lonely too. Care is soft power, but can also lead to anger or be used as an instrument of political power. Once defended as a ‘female’ capacity, today’s care is both everywhere and in crisis. On the one hand, care-givers are celebrated as heroes of our time; on the other hand, working conditions are often precarious. This is true for most social and cultural professions as well as for those who take care of environmental and justice issues. Today’s care has become linked with pre-care-ity.

Who really takes care of these issues? Individuals, collectives, companies, cities, states? And what about today’s technologies? Artificial intelligence and algorithms, shape our bodies, our social lives and construct nature. IT seems to care too. Through the help of technology, information is spread, data are assembled, protests are formed and movements are initiated.

In the whole complex of caring, photography plays a special role by making conflicts and bodies of care visible through re-exploring the boundaries between art, activism and journalism. The editors of Trigger #3 are looking for projects, essays, contributions that clearly name conflicts of interest, that show attitudes and present positions that examine the possibilities and delusions of care.

The following spheres of care can be seen as guiding:
- What do you care for? Why do you care?
- How does ‘care’ change in a world where the boundaries between humans and nonhumans (incl. AI) are hard to discern and arguably tenuous.
- Besides reshaping global responsibilities, what types of small, local, lively stories/forms of care demand attention too?
- How does the visual arts or photography envision the ‘careful’ relationship between artist and 'subject'? What possible tracks of ‘collective or collaborative care’ are opening up?
- How can we improve precarious labour conditions? How does care and fair practice relate to one another?
- What kind of critiques or delusions of care should we be aware of?

If interested, please follow the guidelines:
- Proposal should be maximum 200 words outlining your intent.
- Proposal deadline: Thursday, April 8
- Submit to: tom.viaenefomu.be

If selected, the format/fee will be:
- Maximum 2000 words
- Payment is 0.20€ per word (incl. VAT)
- Visual essays or artist contributions vary from 200€ to 300€ euro’s
- Deadline for the contribution would be Monday, June 21 (negotiable if needed)

Please share and spread this call for proposals. Can be text, text and image, and image.

Contributions could vary from computational photography, to curatorial practices, to crossovers with popular culture, to collection studies, to observational documentary, to artcivism, to queer writing etc. We basically welcome essays, but also interviews, provocations and artist contributions. Contributors are asked to be attentive to the role played by issues of race, gender, class, and geopolitical location in determining how care is experienced, practised and gets corrupted.

For more information on Trigger contributions, please read our general submission guidelines: https://fomu.be/trigger/articles/call-for-care

Thank you.

Looking forward to your proposals!

Trigger is an English-language publication (online and print) concerning photography, which is part of FOMU. Once a year, during the international fair Paris Photo, Trigger publishes a printed thematical issue with 1000 copies. Through close collaboration with a partner who, like the Biennale für aktuelle Fotografie, acts as guest editor, Trigger brings together multiple essayistic and visual perspectives on a current topic.

Quellennachweis:
CFP: FOMU / Trigger magazine #3 (2021): Care. In: ArtHist.net, 15.03.2021. Letzter Zugriff 01.05.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/33583>.

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