The artists nominated by

Triennial of Photography | Deichtorhallen
in
2026

Personal, political, and planetary histories of loss, memory, and (re)appropriation – rooted in lived experience and research-based approaches – are central to the five selected artists of 2026. Their practices range from documentary photography and moving image to installation and mixed-media works, challenging conventional notions of photography as a purely observational medium. Together, these feminist, intimate, playful, conceptual, and experimental positions articulate photography as a site of remembrance, critical reflection, and imagination.

With what happened and never happened, Amelie Sachs engages in a sensitive and layered examination of the long-silenced practice of forced adoption in the former GDR. Developed in close collaboration with author and filmmaker Eva Gemmer, the project combines documentary photography, archival material, and text to explore themes of loss, memory, and absence. By making visible histories that remain unresolved, the work traces fragmented family narratives and their emotional scars within society. Amelie Sachs’ feminist and collaborative approach demonstrates how ethical documentary practice can create space for reckoning and new ways of imagining justice. (Cale Garrido, Curator 9th Triennial of Photography Hamburg 2026)

Anna Perepchai’s work emerges from lived experience, shaped by migration, displacement, and the forced departure from home due to war, as exemplified by the context of Ukraine. Through an intimate and attentive gaze, she reflects on loss, memory, and shifting senses of belonging.

Working across lens-based and cameraless photography, installation, and sculpture, Perepchai expands photography beyond its traditional limits, treating it as a tactile and embodied process. Her practice incorporates everyday objects, objets trouvés, and soil as both subject and material, allowing traces of land, history, and personal experience to enter the image itself. Attentive to the enduring effects of colonial and imperial violence on landscapes, bodies, and objects, her work considers photography as a site where personal and political histories converge.

Through this materially expanded approach, Perepchai creates immersive works in which photography unfolds as a tactile and embodied language, carrying memory, emotion, and lived experience. (Cale Garrido, Curator 9th Triennial & Bettina Freimann, Project Director 9th Triennial)

A witty and subversive energy flows through the intermedial spatial installations of Aslı Özdemir, which interweave photographic and bodily memory. Across different series, Özdemir develops a coded play of historical references drawn from art history, personal family archives, and the performative appropriation and reconfiguration of class codes. Her practice is playful, conceptual, critical, and performative. Working with remote control and set-like arrangements, the artist stages relationships and acts between observation and performance. The daily is pictured as scenes of embodied history, re-enactments hint at the transgenerational transmission of experience, as Özdemir explores habitus through continuity, repetition, and rupture. (Nadine Isabelle Henrich, Curator, House of Photography at Deichtorhallen Hamburg)

The artistic practice of Kang Kaiwen focuses on the formats and paradigms of the moving image. Her research-based approach is highly experimental, engaging with the medium itself in order to explore its “ecological” existence.
Through an investigation of modes, qualities, and processes of relation—between humans and the natural world, and between humans and the cosmos—Kang draws on mythologies and legends from both China and the West, extending them into post-human paradigms that speculate on possible futures within and beyond the Anthropocene.
Her distinctive storytelling merges multiple temporal and spatial contexts—spanning different time zones, languages, cultural backgrounds, and belief systems—to create visually striking moving-image works. By layering myths, natural environments, atmospheric conditions, and shifting spatial and temporal frameworks, she develops a unique visual language rooted in cinematic and photographic aesthetics.
In doing so, Kang establishes an innovative trans-cultural visual practice that connects Eastern and Western cultures, cosmologies, and belief systems, bridging ancestral knowledge with speculative thinking and post-human perspectives on humanity’s relationship to the world. (Bettina Freimann, Project Director 9th Triennial)

Vanessa Amoah Opoku's photographic and mixed-media works combine to create a material and organic atmosphere in which to bring personal, cultural, and political histories into visibility. There is across her work a turbulent sense of rupture and dis-ease. Yet, at the same time, a sense of wanting to unpack the baggage of colonial heritage is present through the sharing of hybrid frames of memory and technology. Here, old industrial worlds collide with forensic digital processes, the outcome of which weaves back and forth to make new hauntologies of cultural and familial knowledge. The cold lens of applied technologies joined to the fabric of the autobiographical tension of life opens space for a praxis that expands the horizon and evolutionary possibilities of lens-based work.  (Mark Sealy, Artistic Director 9th Triennial)

The members of the jury:

Mark Sealy (Artistic Director 9th Triennial of Photography Hamburg 2026)

Cale Garrido (Curator 9th Triennial)

Bettina Freimann (Project Director 9th Triennial)

Nadine Isabelle Henrich (Curator, House of Photography at Deichtorhallen Hamburg)

Projects nominations
Kaiween Kang
My creative approach is mostly based on social context and theoretical research, experimenting with the moving image medium itself and reactivating the format and model of the moving image. My research direction is to search for the "ecological" existence of the moving image, and to explore a new relationship between "human beings" and "the world" in the technological increase of entropy in the Anthropocene.
Vanessa Amoah Opoku
Vanessa Amoah Opoku is a German-Ghanaian interdisciplinary artist who transforms imperial surveying technologies such as LiDAR into relational tools. Her practice explores how diaspora and displacement, affecting bodies, species and materials, develops its own cartographic technologies: systems for connecting across distances. Through fragmentary point cloud scans and their materialization in space, she creates multi-layered installations made of wax, textiles, and digital fragments that invite encounter. She has been nominated for the European Commission's and Ars Electronica’s S+T+ARTS Prize 2025, and is part of BPA// Berlin program for artists 26-27. Her work has recently been shown at Belvedere 21 Vienna, Deichtorhallen Hamburg, Fotomuseum Winterthur, EIGEN+ART Lab Berlin, and at the 18th International Triennial of Textile in Łódź. She teaches process design at HGK Basel FHNW. An artist's book will be published by DISTANZ in 2026.
Aslı Özdemir
I am an interdisciplinary visual artist whose practice operates at the intersection of intergenerational memory, empowerment, and a critical examination of the self in private and public spaces. I understand care—emek in Turkish—as both a political and aesthetic practice: a form of resistance, labor, and memory. Photography is my primary medium, which I use as a means of intervention and re-inscription. Working with my family archive, I explore gestures, touches, and everyday objects as traces of embodied history. By cropping, enlarging, and rearranging these fragments, I fill in the gaps to reframe marginalized bodies and relationships as active subjects. Alongside this, I create intermedial spatial installations, performances, and literary works that interweave photographic and bodily memory. My photographic language oscillates between documentation and staging. Using luminous, symbol-rich still lifes as well self- and family portraits, I examine habitus as an inscription of history—as continuity, repetition, and ruptures. In my portraits, I work with remote control, thus referring to a queer feminist canon that critically questions the medium on the level of the image.
Amelie Sachs
Amelie Sachs is a documentary photographer and photo editor based between Munich and Cairo. Her work focuses on portrait photography and long-term documentary projects. She studied photojournalism and documentary photography at Hanover University of Applied Sciences and Arts and at the Danish School of Media and Journalism (DMJX) in Aarhus. In her practice, Amelie Sachs engages primarily with feminist perspectives and questions of self-empowerment. Her visual narratives combine different photographic approaches and deliberately incorporate gaps, ambiguity, and fictional elements. Developed over extended periods of time and in close collaboration with her protagonists, her long-term projects are grounded in visual research and explore hidden and intimate realities that often remain unseen or overlooked.
Anna Perepechai
ANNA PEREPECHAI (1989, Poltava, UA) is a visual artist and photographer who has been living and working in Germany and Ukraine since 2014. From a migrant perspective, she investigates how colonial and imperial violence inscribes itself into landscapes, bodies, and, everyday objects, particularly in the context of formerly Sovietized societies. Central themes of her work include witnessing, memory, and states of temporal and emotional incompleteness. Her practice combines documentary and subjective approaches, cameraless and lens-based photography, writing, and archival materials.
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