The artists nominated by

Organ Vida
in
2026

Organ Vida presents the work of five emerging photographers and visual artists from Croatia, Serbia, and Slovenia. Across photography, film, and text, their practices attend to the invisible structures, histories, and residues that continue to shape and choreograph the present. Rooted in intimate vantage points, the works move between diaristic gestures and close observations of the wider social fabric.

Glorija Lizde’s I Swallowed My Dream revisits nineteenth-century psychiatric photography, exposing the power relations embedded in medical archives of hysteria. By re-enacting historical images and positioning herself as both photographer and subject, Lizde disrupts the authority of the clinical gaze reclaiming suppressed female histories.

If Lizde interrogates the institutional archive, Hana Selena Sokolović turns to the fragile, familial one. In Dear Orchid, she departs from a family diary written during the Bosnian War, the only remaining record of her sisters’ displacement. Returning to the places traced in the diary, Sokolović treats the archive as something embodied and transmitted across generations.

Nik Erik Neubauer’s White Smoke, Brown Glare observes New York City as a site of aspiration and inequality. Through street photography and diaristic wall texts, the work captures everyday life shaped by gentrification and hyper-capitalism, while foregrounding small communities as spaces of resistance, warmth, and survival.

Tjaša Kalkan is equally interested in different urban dynamics visible in the orchestrated environment of a construction site. Her focus remains on a single case study - voyeuristic observation of construction of a new residential building in her area. In the work DUET she juxtaposes the construction of a new residential building with the decay of her own modernist high-rise. Through this parallel documentation, the work reflects on impermanence, labor, and time, resisting linear narratives of progress.

Kalkan's poetic tale of impermanence resembles the conceptual framework of Pavle Nikolić's project Knots. His work observes creation and decay from a more abstract and material register. Knots appear here not as metaphors but as operations - sites where tension, dependency, and collapse are staged in miniature. Refusing ideals of integrity or permanence, the knot exposes its own conditions of undoing. It binds and incubates, accumulating residue, memory, and excess.

The members of the jury:

Barbara Gregov

Lovro Japundžić

Lea Vene

Tia Čiček, curator

Natalija Paunić, curator

Projects nominations
Tjaša Kalkan
Born in 1987 in Travnik, Bosnia and Herzegovina, she lives and works in Zagreb, Croatia. She holds a Master’s degree in Photography from the Academy of Dramatic Art, University of Zagreb, and a Bachelor’s degree in German and French Language and Literature. She is a visual artist working with photography as a conceptual and spatial medium. Her practice examines liminal and psychological spaces through constructed or subtly staged scenes, often drawing on theatrical strategies and elements of the familiar. Combining philosophical inquiry with subtle absurdity, her work destabilizes the familiar, using ambiguity as a tool for reflection while gently questioning perception, logic, and the structures that shape everyday experience. She has exhibited her work in numerous solo and international group exhibitions across Europe. She received the Audience Award at the HT Award for Croatian Contemporary Art at the Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb in 2017 and 2019, and was nominated for the Award for Best Young Author at the Rovinj Photodays festival in 2012.
Pavle Nikolić
Pavle Nikolić (b. 2001, Niš, Serbia) works with photography and video, examining fundamental human tensions — authority and powerlessness, dominance and submission, aggression and passivity. He investigates how these opposing forces interact, using the constructive and transformative capacities of his chosen mediums to find the threshold at which they begin to turn into one another. Pavle studied applied photography at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna and fine art at the Beaux-Arts de Paris. He now lives and works in Paris.
Glorija Lizde
Glorija Lizde (b. 1991, Split) holds an MA in Photography (Academy of Dramatic Art in Zagreb) and a BA in Film and Video (Arts Academy Split). Her practice focuses on recreation and reinterpretation of the archives and memory interweaving documentary and staged photography, text and objects. She has had several solo exhibitions and participated in numerous group shows in Croatia and internationally, including the O21 OSTRALE Biennale, She Who Starts the Song (17th Gjon Mili International Exhibition of Photography and Moving Image), Familiar Fantoms (Residency Unlimited, New York), Of This World – Envisioning Alternative Cartographies (Robert Capa Contemporary Photography Center), Being/Seeing (QUAD Gallery), Athens Photo Festival (Benaki Museum), In-between (The Bridge and Tunnel Gallery, New York), Floodlit Room – Women’s Photographic Practices in Croatia, among others. Her works are included in the collections of the Museum of Arts and Crafts in Zagreb and the Kiyosato Museum of Photographic Arts in Japan. Lizde was selected for the international emerging artists program Parallel – European Photo Based Platform in 2018 and 2021. She received the Dr. Éva Kahán Foundation Scholarship and Residency in 2022 and was awarded the Radoslav Putar Award the same year, recognizing her as the best young visual artist in Croatia.
Nik Erik Neubauer
Nik Erik Neubauer (1994) is a visual artist and photographer from Ljubljana, Slovenia. His work explores intimate social issues of everyday life through a contemporary documentary approach. He earned a master’s degree in photography from the Academy of Fine Arts and Design in Ljubljana in 2021. In the same year, Neubauer was nominated for the Leica Oskar Barnack Newcomer Award and he received the Watchdog Award from the Slovenian Association of Journalists for his long-term project documenting anti-government protests in Slovenia. In 2022, he was one of the winners of the Belfast Photo Festival in the photobook category. The following year, in 2023, Neubauer was nominated for the OHO Award, Slovenia's leading national prize for young visual artists. His second photobook, Where’s the Afters?, published by the National Museum of Contemporary History, was shortlisted for the Rencontres d’Arles Book Awards and, as of 2024, is also available at Printed Matter Inc., New York City. In 2025, he received second place in the Life category at the Sarajevo Photography Festival. He is also the co-editor of Henrik – Journal of Contemporary Photography.
Hana Selena Sokolović
Hana Selena Sokolović was born in Vienna in 1999 and grew up in Belgrade. She is a visual artist and researcher working between the Balkans and the Netherlands. Her work has been shown in group exhibitions in the Czech Republic and the Netherlands, some of which are As Water Softens Stones (Royal Academy of Arts, The Hague, 2025), Push, Pull, Shift (Živi Atelje DK, Zagreb, 2025), 00:05:59 (Paradise, The Hague, 2024), and Fragments in Transit (Beetroot Studio, Thessaloniki, 2024). Alongside her artistic practice, she has worked with children in educational and socially engaged settings, an experience that continues to shape her people-centered and collaborative approach to art. Hana holds a BA in Photography and New Media from FAMU in Prague (2021) and an MA in Photography and Society from the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague (2025). She currently lives and works between Belgrade and The Hague.
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