Tahir Ozgur
Tahir Özgürs photographic practice is enhanced by his journalistic background, through which he cultivates a narrative visual language rooted in observation, empathy, and truth. His images express an equilibrium between the poetic and the documentary. Each work of him becomes a self-contained story where light, timing, and human expression converge. Rather than extending his narratives through motion as in cinema, Özgür condenses the essence of lived experience into a single, resonant moment — transforming the photograph into a visual novel of ordinary lives. His investigative approach contributes his work documentary character while simultaneously questioning the boundary between looking and seeing. Centring on human stories across Asia, Özgür gives visibility to the “unseen” and dignity to the overlooked, using light not merely as illumination but as revelation.
His acclaimed photography The Child earned the Grand Prize at the Hamdan International Photography Award (HIPA- 2011), while his photography story “Last Nomads: Migrating to a World of No Tomorrow” was published and awarded by National Geographic in 2008, marking the beginning of his recognition on the global stage. In 2010, he was awarded the distinction Excellence FIAP (EFIAP) by the Fédération Internationale de lArt Photographique. A year later, his series The Mountain Villages of the Black Sea was acquired for the Hahnemühle Collection during the companys 425th anniversary competition and showcased in the Photokina exhibitions across twelve countries. Same year, Özgür received the Grand Prize at HIPA, dedicated to the legacy of Ansel Adams. Another iconic photography, Miners Lunch, together with seven photography work from his project “Altitude -750 / Mineworkers”, was exhibited at the opening of the Ruhr Museum in Germany, emphasizing the quiet heroism of labour and endurance. The same year, he was awarded the FIAP Gold Medal.
Born in Antakya, Turkey in 1964, Özgür initially pursued journalism serving as a columnist, editor, and executive director within several of foremost media institutions of the country for over three decades. Photography, once an extension of his journalistic practice, lately transformed into his lifes passion. Since then, he has been photographing people to narrate their stories.
Özgürs artistry has been recognized repeatedly at the prestigious Golden Camera awards, where he claimed the title five times and received the Golden Camera distinction in 2015. His body of work has been presented in over thirty solo and group exhibitions and international biennials across France, Germany, Switzerland, Japan, the UAE, the USA, China, Canada, and Turkey.
Tahir Özgür currently lives and works in Amsterdam, continuing to capture humanitys quiet stories with a vision that bridges journalism, art, and poetry.
More
Less