Fereshteh Eslahi

PX3 Prix de la Photographie Paris 2025 – State of the World
Curatorial Selection – But We Were So Strong

Can you take us behind the scenes of your winning series? What was the story you aimed to tell,  and did any unexpected moments shape the final result? 

This series is actually part of a long-term project in which women play the central role. I live in a country  where women have been ignored in many ways by both the government and a deeply rooted  patriarchal tradition. And, of course, as a woman, I have always been a part of this story myself. But in  my country, women have always tried to break taboos, and they do not accept these chains. The peak of  this uprising was the Woman, Life, Freedom movement. 

I have followed the entire path women have taken without knowing the final outcome of the project, or  where this resistance might eventually lead. So there are always unexpected events that challenge your  direction. In subjects like this—where the aim is to document an ongoing process connected to society  and its reactions—you can speculate about how it might end, but there is no definite answer. Everything  works like a butterfly effect; you can never be certain what will ultimately happen. The recent twelve day war and the shadow of conflict, for example, will undoubtedly influence the direction of the  movement. 

And naturally, it will also influence the direction of my project. 

Photojournalism often demands vulnerability – from both subject and photographer. How do you  approach capturing truth while maintaining empathy and respect? 

Respecting the rights of my subjects is a top priority for me. In 90 percent of cases, I am not a  photographer who quickly takes a picture and moves on. I usually spend a lot of time engaging with the  subject, being part of their world, listening to their story, and doing everything in that regard—except in  cases where the subject is in a public space and I am certain that photographing them will not cause any  trouble. 

Since the lives and concerns of my subjects have been part of my daily experience and something I have  grappled with personally, I have generally earned their trust and confidence that I am a good custodian  of their stories. I believe that the safety of my subjects and my integrity in telling their stories is what  gives my work credibility, and I never want to compromise that. 

However, in this region, you should also know that as a documentary photographer, there are many  situations where you yourself may face risk or harm. 

How has receiving recognition from The State of the World competition influenced your  perspective on the role of your work in today’s global dialogue? 

Unfortunately, I was unable to attend the exhibition in person or even see an image from my series  displayed there. However, like all documentary photographers and photojournalists, my dream is to  make the voices of the people captured in my images heard by those who need to hear them.

What motivates you to continue capturing the world through your lens, and where do you hope to  take your work in the future? 

To be honest, there was a time when I believed that images could directly create change. But today,  after many years, I realize that this was a naive dream. It may sound pessimistic, but witnessing  thousands of events unfolding across the world, I am coming to understand that someone like me can  only make people think — I cannot create significant change. Perhaps I have grown more cynical, but I  see a kind of inevitability imposed by powerful institutions, and I often feel powerless against it. 

Yet even with all this, I don’t stop moving. I am part of the people who know their power is limited but  still try to push for change. Everyone contributes in their own way, and mine is to document and prevent  things from being forgotten. I no longer think too much about the future — I simply continue on the  path. 

How do you find balance between aesthetic vision and factual storytelling – ensuring that beauty  enhances rather than distorts truth? 

I do not create beauty to soften reality or to decorate suffering. Therefore, between beauty and truth, I  always choose truth, and beauty is present in the image only when it is part of reality itself. If there is  beauty in my photograph, it usually comes from the reality of the situation: from the tension in the  atmosphere even within stillness, from the subject’s gaze, or from a trace of their emotion that has  become tangible. I never try to make anything more beautiful; I only try to see more clearly. I am  strongly opposed to sentimentalism in documentary photography, and I even believe that when beauty  becomes excessive, it can damage reality and distract the viewer’s eye with surface aesthetics instead of  engaging their mind with the concern behind the image and its story. 

Human beings hold a special importance in my photographs, but I neither try to portray my subject as  more beautiful than they are, nor do I, if I have a criticism of them, portray them in a way that  humiliates them. I prefer the viewer to understand them through their environment or their story, not  through something I have forcibly imposed. I maintain a human distance so that I do not fall into false  romanticism. At the same time, I allow — and try — the situation and the space to give power to my  subject’s presence, not surface aesthetics or decorative beauty. 

I try, by invoking the mental presence of my subject that reflects the pains within them, to involve the  viewer with the concerns of my photograph — not to create a misleading beauty that makes the viewer  get caught in a superficial layer of aesthetics and say at first glance, “What a beautiful picture!” instead  of thinking about my concern. Or if they do say that, at least it would be because of the feeling they  received from the subject and the situation — not because of colorfulness or eccentric framing.

SEE THE PHOTOGRAPHER’S WINNING WORK

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