Getty Images and Verizon Media have named five recipients of its “Disability Stories” Creative Bursary grant centering around life with disabilities.
Open to photographers globally, and supported by a matching grant by Verizon, Disability Stories is a one-time Bursary, awarding one recipient $15,000, one recipient $10,000 and three recipients $5,000 each, as determined by a panel of creative industry judges and disability activists.

“Given that [December 3] is the United Nations’ International Day of Persons with Disabilities, we couldn’t be more thrilled to honor five truly talented individuals as they seek to picture and share stories conveying the realities of disability,” says Guy Merrill, Creative Bursary Judge and Global Head of Art for Getty Images, in a media release.

“This global Bursary reaffirms our commitment, alongside Verizon Media, to support the authentic representation of people with disabilities in the media—something we began in 2018 when we launched our joint effort, The Disability Collection.”

“The Disabilities Stories grant helps to further the creation of content that respectfully and authentically depicts the disability community, and therefore creates media that truly represents all. We’re thrilled to be part of this initiative and to empower photographers to do the same,” adds Larry Goldberg, Head of Accessibility at Verizon Media.

Recipients of the Disability Stories Creative Bursary include:

First Place ($15,000)

  • Nolan Ryan Trowe for Adopted Family: Nolan is a disabled documentary photographer and film maker who is inspired by the human condition. His project sheds light on a group of 10 people with disabilities who gather weekly in Harlem to discuss disability rights and representation.

Second Place ($10,000)

  • Snezhana von Buedingen for Sofie at Work: Snezhana, from Cologne, Germany, documents the life of a young woman with down syndrome for two years as she transitions into adulthood and faces the day-to-day challenges of her disability.

Third Place ($5,000)

  • Adetona Omokanye for Beyond 4 Foot 10 Inches: Adetona’s project aims to deconstruct the socio-cultural stereotypes of dwarfs in media and advertising. The subjects in this series are beautiful, compelling, bold and vivacious.
  • Isabel Alexander for Metronome: Isabel captures her brother, who has autism, and the ways in which his disability impacts not only his life, but the lives of those who are closest to him.
  • Jacqueline Foss for Beneath the Skin: Jacqueline, who lives in Baltimore, uses self-portrait therapy to express what it is like to live with chronic ailments.

“With the help of the Getty Images Disability Stories grant, I know this work will have the space and time to naturally grow and evolve,” Trowe shares, in the release. “I feel free to explore concepts and ideas that I may not have considered before winning this prize, and that’s liberating. This bursary is a chance for people with disabilities to honestly express themselves.”

Lawrence Carter-Long, communications director for the Disability Rights Education & Defense Fund, spokesperson for the National Disability Leadership Alliance, and Creative Bursary judge, believes that upgrading the way society sees disability begins with the creative process: “The Disability Stories grants have gone beyond wishful thinking by giving photographers the actual means to turn inspiration into perspiration—to make their creative vision real.”

Each of the five Bursary recipients have been invited to license their award-winning content through GettyImages.com, at a 100% royalty rate for imagery created within their proposed project, and are also invited to receive guidance and mentorship from a Getty Images Art Director, as well as a feature on Getty Images’ Creative Insights website, per the release.

[Source(s): Getty Images, PR Newswire]