The artists nominated by

Fundació Foto Colectania
in
2026

Foto Colectania’s inaugural nominations to the FUTURES Photography Platform are grounded in a curatorial commitment to practices that understand photography as an expanded, relational, and research-driven field. The five projects proposed articulate distinct positions and visual approaches, yet converge in their attention to how images operate within systems of memory, power, identity, and historical narration. Together, they reflect photography’s capacity to function not only as representation, but as a critical device through which lived experience, structural violence, and affective memory are negotiated and reconfigured.

Cristóbal Ascencio’s Las Flores mueren dos veces engages photography as a space for technological, emotional, and mnemonic intervention. Revisiting his family archive and his father’s last garden following the delayed revelation of his father’s suicide, Ascencio employs glitch, photogrammetry, and virtual environments to deconstruct and recompose inherited images and narratives. By manipulating the structural data of photographs, he produces visual metaphors for corrupted memory, while the three-dimensional reconstruction of the garden addresses memory’s plasticity and persistence. The project unfolds across code-altered analogue images, digitally generated plants, and an immersive VR environment, establishing a dialogue between absence and continuity, and between personal loss and technological mediation.

In Padre, Marisol Mendez undertakes a personal and political excavation of masculinity through a feminist lens. Rooted in family correspondence and generational memory, the project traces how patriarchal identity is inherited, performed, and contested. Through staged portraits, archival interventions, and symbolic gestures, Mendez exposes the contradictions embedded within machismo: tenderness and domination, care and violence, presence and absence. Motifs such as hunting operate both literally and metaphorically, articulating structures of control while images of fragility and decay unsettle hegemonic ideals. Padre opens a reflective space in which masculinity is not only critiqued, but can be reimagined.

Paula Artés’s El cabal del riu (The River’s Course) continues her long-term investigation into hidden histories and extractive power structures through collaborative, community-based methodologies. Focusing on the RENACE hydroelectric complex on Guatemala’s Cahabón River, the project reveals how neoliberal reforms and colonial continuities have enabled systematic dispossession of Q’eqchi’ Maya communities. Artés’s analogue photographs trace infrastructural scars, such as pipelines, retaining walls, abandoned machinery, while centering water as both a living entity and a site of conflict. Developed in dialogue with Bernardo Caal Xol and local communities, the work functions as a device of visibility, exposing mechanisms that appear neutral yet produce profound inequality.

With Esto es España, Sergio Pontier reimagines Spanish identity by placing Black presence at the centre of the national narrative. Combining documentary, fashion, and intimate portraiture, the book reframes cultural symbols like flamenco, religious iconography, or football, through Afro-descendant lived experience. Shot primarily on film, the work builds a visual archive that is both personal and political, embracing multiplicity and asserting visibility, belonging, and pride as foundational to contemporary Spanish identity.

Yunping Li’s ongoing Self-Portraiture Performances, initiated with 回家 (huí jiā), expands photography into a performative, site-specific practice. Through repeated live self-portrait actions activated within exhibition contexts, Li collapses distinctions between image and performance, documentation, and gesture, private and public. By inviting audience participation, the project foregrounds the role of the external gaze in the construction of self, addressing transitioning as a collective, relational experience. Photography here becomes both the site and the trace of negotiation, embodying identity as process rather than fixed representation.

Through these nominations, Foto Colectania affirms its commitment to supporting practices, particularly within the Iberian and Latin(x) ecosystems, that mobilize photography as a critical, situated, and imaginative field, one capable of holding complexity, contradiction, and long-term inquiry.

The members of the jury:

Elisa Medde - Foto Colectania Director

Irene de Mendoza - Foto Colectania Artistic Director

Projects nominations
Yunping Li
Bio: Yun Ping Li (Hubei, China, 1998) is a visual artist based in Madrid. His work investigates the intersection between photography and performance, as well as exploring the concept of belonging in relation to the human body, physical spaces, and family ties. He is author of 回家 (huí jiā). The project has been winner of 13th Galicia Contemporary Photography Award, Fotonoviembre photography biennial and FOTODOKS open call 2025 and Getxophoto open call 2026. He has presented it at Paris Internationale and the annual "Plat(t)form" portfolio review event at Fotomuseum Winterthur (Switzerland). He has participated in solo and collective exhibitions in venues such as El Local (Madrid), Photo Elysée (Switzerland), La Panera (Lleida), The National Museum of Anthropology (Madrid) and Sala Arte Joven (Madrid). He has published his work in Sinetheta, Balam, Exit and Esto es un cuerpo magazines. His work is in the collection of Kutxa foundation.
Sergio Pontier
Sergio (b.2003) is an Afrodominican-Spanish artist, photographer and director who graduated on a Audiovisual Communication Photography degree in May 2025. He works on both personal and external creative comissions related to photography and moving image in the fashion and creative industry. His creative journey began at the age of 15 when he picked up one of his old film cameras from his mom. His work spans across fashion, racial narratives, documentary storytelling, and observations. Sergio places profound significance on colorimetry and the essence of the Black individual. His practice strives to redefine new perceptions on blackness and its beauty, particularly delving into the intricacies of Spanish-Black society and diaspora. In 2025, Sergio published Esto es España, a photographic book examining Black presence, identity, and lived experience within contemporary Spanish society. The publication was launched through two highly successful events in Madrid and London, and has received significant media attention, including interviews and international coverage by platforms such as PhotoVogue, EE72, and El País Semanal. The project extends his ongoing exploration of Spanish-Black narratives and the diaspora, positioning the book as both a personal and cultural document.
Paula Artés
Paula Artés (1996) is an artist committed to unveiling and questioning hidden spaces of power—and, by extension, control. Through rigorous prior research, she brings these spaces to light. Her work has been exhibited at Museu Habitat, curated by Manuel J. Borja-Villel; Santa Mònica in Barcelona; Lo Pati in Amposta; the Museu Morera; and the Festival de la Imagen in Colombia. She won the ArtNou Award for Best Exhibition at àngels barcelona gallery. Her work is part of the Mapfre Foundation collection and the Contemporary Art Collection of the Generalitat de Catalunya. She has been selected for PhotoEspaña Descubrimientos, Sala d’Art Jove, VEGAP, OSIC, and Unseen Amsterdam. She has also been nominated for the Gabriele Basilico Prize, the C/O Berlin Talent Award, the MAST Foundation Prize, and the Pla(t)form Prize at FotoMuseum. Additionally, she has participated in residencies at HISK in Belgium and Baladre at Lo Pati.
Marisol Mendez
Marisol Mendez uses her camera to study the tension between truth and fiction, the tight relationship between what a photograph creates and the (sur)real it comes from. Driven by research-led and self-initiated projects, she seeks to deconstruct traditional modes of representation and weave nuanced narratives with multiple layers of meaning. At the heart of her artistic pursuit lies the exploration of humankind. Marisol is moved by the desire to build genuine connections with the people on the other side of the lens. Her objective is to encapsulate the intimacy of shared experiences, the tenderness or friction of mutual recognition. Embracing the horizontality of images, she utilizes a diverse array of visual languages to tell stories that traverse the boundaries between individual experience, collective memory, and imagination. Rooted in the landscapes and folklore of her Bolivian culture, Marisol’s work oscillates between candid and staged, naturalistic and mythical.
Cristóbal Ascencio
Cristóbal Ascencio (Guadalajara, 1988) is a photographer and visual artist whose work explores the relationship between images and memory. With studies in Audiovisual Media (CAAV Jalisco) and Contemporary Photography (EFTI Madrid), his practice goes beyondtraditional photography into virtual reality, data manipulation, and photogrammetry. He hasexhibited individually at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Spain (2025), Fundación Marso(2025) and Getxo Photo Festival (2022), and collectively at Foam Amsterdam, AthensPhotography Festival, Casa del Lago UNAM, and Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation. Selected for FOAM Talent 2024-25, he won the First Prize FotoCanal Photography Book ofthe Community of Madrid (2024) and published Las flores mueren dos veces with Editorial Dispara (2025). His work is present in collections such as Art Vontobel and Fundación ENAIRE. His work has been published in FOAM Magazine, Exit, Aesthetica, and the British Journal of Photography
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