Adam Ferguson (photographer)

Adam Ferguson is an Australian freelance photojournalist currently working out of New Delhi, India.[1] His photographs have appeared in Newsweek, Time, International Herald Tribune, The New York Times and Chicago Tribune.[2] In August 2009, he accompanied the Apache company to establish a combat-operations post in the Tangi Valley near Kabul, Afghanistan.[3]

Ferguson was born and grew up in New South Wales, Australia. He received a Bachelor of Photography from Griffith University in 2004 and two years later was an intern at VII.[2][4] In May 2010 he was elected to the VII Network.

In 2009 he was featured by Photo District News as one of thirty "new and emerging photographers to watch".[5]

Ferguson visited Churachandpur District in India's troubled north east twice in 2007 as a HIV program officer, where media access for foreign journalists is usually restricted, with an NGO working with injecting drug users. Meeting youth battling heroin addiction on the streets and in rehabilitation centres, people living with HIV contracted through drug use, and families struggling internally with members using heroin, he documented the lives devastated by Manipur's heroin trade.[6] Ferguson exhibited "Heroin in Manipur" at FotoFreo (Fremantle) in 2008.[7]

Ferguson won the first prize in the spot news singles category of the World Press Photo Awards 2010 for a photograph taken after a suicide bombing in Kabul.[8]

References

  1. ^ "Adam Ferguson", Foto Freo Festival Guide, 2008
  2. ^ a b "Biography of Adam Ferguson", VII. Accessed 2010-02-09.
  3. ^ Richard Lacayo, "A Window on the War in Afghanistan", Time, 12 October 2009. Accessed 2010-02-09.
  4. ^ "Speakers" Centre of Documentary Photography, Griffith University. Speaker Bio.
  5. ^ Conor Risch, "PDN's 30 2009: Adam Ferguson", PDN Online, 2 March 2009. Accessed 2010-02-09.
  6. ^ "Photojournalism is not so much a vocation as a way of life". Griffith University. http://www98.griffith.edu.au/dspace/bitstream/10072/23922/1/54825_2.pdf. Retrieved 2010-02-27. 
  7. ^ "FotoFreo 2008 Projections", FotoFreo. Accessed 2010-02-09.
  8. ^ "World Press Photo Awards 2010", The Guardian, 12 February 2010. Accessed 2010-02-12.