URI Research and Scholarship Photo Contest winners announced
WINNING PHOTO: “Train Tracks,” by
Temitope Ogunwumi
The University of Rhode Island has named the winners of its inaugural Research and Scholarship Photo Contest, which drew close to 300 entries that highlight the breadth and depth of the work URI’s students and faculty are doing around the world.
Entries included fine art,
photography, electron microscopy and computerized imaging outputs, and
showcased scholarship that runs the gamut from polar exploration to underwater
archeology, and from cellular-level research to composite-mapping techniques.
“This contest demonstrates the global reach and talent of our students, faculty, researchers and staff and highlights, in brilliant photographs, the many opportunities available to members of the URI community,” said URI President David M. Dooley. “All of the submitted photos offer a glimpse into diverse scholarship, from faculty-led student trips abroad to labs right here in Rhode Island.”
The contest was sponsored by URI’s
three magazines, QuadAngles, Momentum and 41°N.
“It was an honor to review these
photos. Even as a former URI student and current member of the URI Alumni
Association Board, I am impressed by the variety and quality of photographs,”
said John J. Palumbo, one of the contest’s judges, a 1976 graduate of URI and
publisher of Rhode Island Monthly Magazine.
The three other judges were Krisanne
Murray, a 1995 graduate of URI and owner of Wakefield’s Designroom, a graphic
design, photography and web services firm; Kim Robertson, assistant director of
URI’s Department of Publications and Creative Services; and Nora Lewis, URI
photographer.
Winning images will be published in the URI magazines.
The winners are:
First
Place: art/communication studies
undergraduate student Temitope Ogunwumi ’18 of Cumberland, R.I., for “Train Tracks,” shot in Chicago for a
photography class assignment in January 2017, which explored themes of lines
and symmetry in urban architecture. Ogunwumi took the photo for an advanced
photography class.
“It’s primarily a 35mm class, but my professor knew I liked digital photography as well, so she allowed me to do both,” Ogunwumi relates. “My friends and I usually spend our free time traveling and exploring large cities. We use photography as an outlet to document our adventures. This happened to be my second time visiting Chicago. One night during our stay, we decided to explore one of Chicago’s many train stations. After a little while of exploring we wound up stumbling across this area. I was intrigued by the tunnels and the way the tracks intersected one another. I quickly set my tripod up and took a couple photos before leaving.”
“It’s primarily a 35mm class, but my professor knew I liked digital photography as well, so she allowed me to do both,” Ogunwumi relates. “My friends and I usually spend our free time traveling and exploring large cities. We use photography as an outlet to document our adventures. This happened to be my second time visiting Chicago. One night during our stay, we decided to explore one of Chicago’s many train stations. After a little while of exploring we wound up stumbling across this area. I was intrigued by the tunnels and the way the tracks intersected one another. I quickly set my tripod up and took a couple photos before leaving.”
SECOND PRIZE PHOTO: “Deepstaria Medusa,” Megan Lubetkin.
|
THIRD PRIZE PHOTO: “Afternoon Tea,” by Jessica Vandenberg |
Third
Place: College of the Environment and
Life Sciences marine affairs doctoral student Jessica Vandenberg ’20 of Huntington Beach, Calif., for
“Afternoon Tea,” a photograph of an Indonesian jungle guide making tea for
clients in the Malino Highlands, South Sulawesi, Indonesia, in July 2017.
Vandenberg, who is co-advised by Associate Professor Carlos Garcia-Quijano and Assistant Professor Amelia Moore, has been doing dissertation fieldwork that mainly concentrates on small islands in the Spermonde archipelago; this photo was taken on a side trip to mainland Sulawesi to observe hill communities and their relationship to tourism and development. After graduation, Vandenberg “would like to remain in development and conservation in Indonesia.”
Vandenberg, who is co-advised by Associate Professor Carlos Garcia-Quijano and Assistant Professor Amelia Moore, has been doing dissertation fieldwork that mainly concentrates on small islands in the Spermonde archipelago; this photo was taken on a side trip to mainland Sulawesi to observe hill communities and their relationship to tourism and development. After graduation, Vandenberg “would like to remain in development and conservation in Indonesia.”
Three
honorable mentions:
CELS Natural Resources Science
Professor Yeqiao Wang of Wakefield,
who attended Northeast Normal University in China before coming to the U.S. for
graduate studies, for “The Bay is Supposed to Be Frozen By Now,” a photo of a
mother polar bear and her two cubs standing on the shores of Hudson Bay in the
Arctic Ocean Oct. 21, 2016. After a lean summer, the bears were waiting for ice
to form so they could hunt for their primary food source, ringed seals.
Master’s candidate Charlie Scott
(Diné), who is in the College Student Personnel track in Human Development and
Family Studies, and hails from Chinle,
Ariz., for “Ghost.” The photo of juniper berries was taken in early
January, 2018, at Canyon Del Muerto on the Navajo Nation reservation in Arizona
as part of a study of aesthetics through an indigenous lens. Scott’s mother
taught that the berries may be dried to form “ghost beads,” which are said to
provide peace, protection, and good fortune to the wearer.
Wildlife conservation biology/film
and Media undergraduate student Noah Rivard of Sharon, Mass., for “Security Guard,” a photo of a guard
behind his desk, separated from the viewer by glass, taken during an August
2017 URI Photography Club-sponsored trip to Boston, Mass.