What happened after the Oskar Barnack Award
What happened after the Oskar Barnack Award
Alejandro Cegarra
July 21, 2014
I think the evacuation was a natural process of reconciliation. The tower couldn't remain occupied by the 4000 to 5000 squatters who were living there illegally. The city needs to revive areas that had been abandoned earlier.
What changes did the Leica Oskar Barnack Newcomer Award bring for you?
A lot has changed. It's a recognition that gives editors in big newspapers and magazines the assurance that I can complete my work in a responsible manner. For me personally, the award showed me that it was the right choice to follow that path and to continue following it.
You were born in 1989 and you're already working for the Associated Press. Could you ever have imagined your career taking off at such an early age?
I could never have imagined that I would be working at this level so quickly. These days I receive offers from VICE, Al Jaazera and numerous European magazines. I am happy and I feel honoured. I have the feeling that life has good things in store for me.
When I began to work as a professional photographer two years ago, I dreamt of working for the Venezuelan and Latin American countries' international press, to work for an agency or a magazine, to travel, to get to know the world and to attend the great photo festivals. This year that all came true. It may sound like a cliché, but I'm still the same young man I was two years ago. I clearly remember coming back to my hotel room after the Leica centenary celebration and after receiving the Leica Oskar Barnack Newcomer Award, and thinking, 'my dream has come true – now I need to find a new one'.
Alejandro Cegarra+-
Alejandro Cegarra was born in Caracas, Venezuela, in 1989, and still considers the city his home. He studied photography at the Roberto Mata Photography and Journalism Workshop at the University of Alejandro de Humboldt and works for the Associated Press, the Washington Post and Stern. His pictures have been published in the New York Times and Time magazine, among others. In 2014 he was the recipient of the Leica Oskar Barnack Newcomer Award, in 2024 he received the World Press Photo Long-Term Project Award for his project The two Walls. More