The artists nominated by

Photoforum
in
2026

Photoforum Pasquart is pleased to present Olga Bushkova and Julian Stettler as its selected FUTURES talents. Both artists engage with photography as a relational and reflective practice, addressing how images mediate between personal experience, larger systems, and forms of knowledge that resist immediate visibility. Through distinct yet complementary approaches, they contribute to contemporary photographic discourse by expanding the medium beyond representation toward processes of attention, care, and critical inquiry.

Olga Bushkova’s practice is rooted in long term, performative engagement with photography as a tool for communication and observation. Her ongoing project “Photo at 12” is based on a daily exchange of photographs between herself and her father, who lives 3000 kilometers away, in Rostov-on-Don, Russia. Over time, this simple ritual has generated an extensive archive that documents fragments of two lives unfolding in parallel. Bushkova approaches this material not as a closed collection, but as a living archive, continuously revisited, organised, and reflected upon. Patterns of everyday routines emerge alongside traces of broader social and political contexts, revealing how intimate images are never isolated from the world around them. Her work makes a significant contribution to current debates on digital communication, authorship, and care, and highlights photography’s potential as a shared language across distance. Bushkova’s strong engagement with photobook making further situates her practice within contemporary European discourses on sustained, process based storytelling.

Julian Stettler’s work explores fundamental questions of identity, perception, and human entanglement within complex systems. His photographic projects investigate how we relate to environments and phenomena that are abstract, immaterial, or conceptually constructed. In “Bis hierher und nicht weiter”, Stettler questions Western notions of nature and the boundaries we draw between human and non human worlds. His ongoing project “Ist das, was ist?” extends this inquiry toward interfaces of knowledge, combining photography with scientific, essayistic, and poetic texts. By integrating multiple media and formats, including photobooks, Stettler positions photography as a space of approximation rather than explanation. His practice contributes to contemporary debates on ecology, responsibility, and the limits of visual knowledge.

Together, Bushkova and Stettler exemplify contemporary photographic practices that develop over time, shaped by reflection and careful attention to images and their contexts. Their work shows how photography can help us think about relationships, systems, and responsibility.

Selection committee:

Amelie Schüle, Director & Curator Photoforum Pasquart

Projects nominations
Olga Bushkova
Olga Bushkova (*1988 in Rostov-on-Don, RU) is an artist based in Zurich who has been deeply engaged with photography since 2011, using it as a tool to deal with everyday life issues. Her works have been presented in numerous solo and group exhibitions in Switzerland and internationally, including at the Photoforum Pasquart in Biel, the Fonderia 20.9 in Verona, the IMAGO Gallery in Lisbon, the Jungkunst in Winterthur, and the Musée Visionär in Zurich. In her photo books A Google Wife (Dalpine, 2017) and How I Tried to Convince My Husband to Have Children (Witty Books, 2020), she explores themes such as migration, integration, and parenthood from a personal perspective. She is a member of SIYU, the pool collective, and near. Since 2016, she has been working on the long-term project A Photo at 12 (working title), in which she reflects on her communication with her father through photography.
Julian Stettler
Julian Stettler, born in 1998, is an artist and photographer based in Lucerne, Switzerland. He graduated with a Bachelor in Camera Arts from the Lucerne School of Art and Design in 2022. His work revolves around fundamental questions of identity and our entanglements within the world. It is influenced by scientific research and combines empirical with spiritual knowledge. By visualizing the many beings and forces that we interact with, Julian aims to capture the diverse expressions of the universe and challenge viewers to reflect on their place within it. For him, questioning who we are and what we are part of is essential to live as part of a diverse yet entangled world.
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