We invite you to submit your work to the 24th DongGang International Photo Festival, to be held this year from July 17 to October 11, 2026 in Yeongwol, Korea.
This year's theme; The Silence that Shapes
The Silence that Shapes interrogates the very terms by which human beings have come to understand the world. For centuries, we have read nature through a distinctly human lens—projecting onto it our fears and expectations, our lacks and our longings. Yet the question persists: can we ever truly interpret nature on its own terms? Mountains and oceans, earth and light transform and endure according to their own order. Meaning, it turns out, has always been our imposition; nature neither mirrors our emotions nor bends to resemble us.
Landscape is a cross-section of the world. It is always the human observer who speaks of meaning, while nature discloses itself in silence. The world prior to human interpretation—the landscape before narrative and meaning are layered upon it—exists as a kind of archetype, a blank canvas prepared for the mark. The consolations and anxieties, the sublimity and expectation we project onto the landscapes are, in the end, a form of reflection: they tell us how we wish to read and inhabit the world, not the world itself.
What, then, are we actually seeing—and what are we adding?
What nature demands of us is not conclusion or certainty, but inquiry and reflection. No one possesses the truth in full; yet through sustained questioning, we may draw closer to understanding. How will we interpret the landscape before us? By reflecting on our own readings of the natural world, we might begin to measure the gap between how human beings receive the world—and what the world actually is.