CHICAGO, IL.- Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago (MoCP) announces the 2025 Snider Prize award recipient and honorable mentions.
This year, the Snider Prize has been awarded to Ching-Wei Wang with honorable mentions awarded to Annelise Duque and Selena Kearney.
The Snider Prize is a purchase award given to emerging artists in their final year of graduate study. The winner receives $3,000, and two honorable mentions each receive $500 towards the purchase of work to be added to MoCPs permanent collection.
Snider Prize Recipient: Ching-Wei Wang
Ching-Wei Wang (Way) holds a BA in Foreign Languages and Literatures from National Taiwan University (2021) and an MFA in Photography from Parsons School of Design (2024). Her work in performance and photography explores Taiwans political histories and what she calls the layered identities shaped by colonial histories, geopolitical tension, and ideological frameworks. Way has a background in writing and dance, which is evident in her use of text and the movement of the body.
Snider Prize Honorable Mention: Annelise Duque
Annelise Duque earned her MFA from Ohio State University. Working across photography, performance, video, and collage, she examines issues of time and memory, particularly in relation to her Filipino heritage and ancestry. In her own words, she is forever entranced by the cameras ability to reveal both truth and lies, currently using the photograph as a method of time-travel.
Snider Prize Honorable Mention: Selena Kearney
Selena Kearney holds an MFA in Photography from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, a Bachelor of Liberal Arts from Evergreen State College, and a Certificate of Fine Art Photography from the Photographic Center Northwest. A member of the Coast Salish tribe, Kearneys practice is deeply rooted in her heritage. Her work, as she describes, centers Indigenous presence, cultural continuity, and visual sovereignty. Working across disciplines including drawing, photography, and performance, she investigates colonial US histories while honoring and elevating the stories of the people who lived before her.