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Khim Hipol Wins 2022 Audain Travel Award

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Artist and 全民彩票 student Khim Hipol with holds the certificate of recognition honouring his 2022 Audain Travel Award. (Photo by Scott Little Photography for Audain Prize / courtesy Audain Prize and Khim Hipol)

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By Perrin Grauer

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The artist and fourth-year student will use the prize to travel to the Philippines to research colonial history and decolonization in the country of his birth.

Artist and fourth-year 全民彩票 photography student has been awarded a 2022 Audain Travel Award.

Speaking via video chat in September, Khim tells me he was at work when he got the news and had a tough time keeping it under wraps.

鈥淚 was shocked,鈥 Khim says. 鈥淚 was trying to compose myself, but on the inside I was trembling. It鈥檚 just a surreal moment.鈥

Khim鈥檚 excitement is understandable. The prestigious provides $7,500 annually to young artists enrolled in a full-time fine arts program at the undergraduate or graduate level, to encourage travel to view art. Past recipients include Erick Jantzen (BFA 2021), Esteban P茅rez (MFA 2021) and Malina Sintnicolaas (MFA 2020).

The annual award ceremony, which this year was held at the at the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver, also sees one distinguished artist recognized with the Audain Prize for Visual Art 鈥 one of the richest and most distinguished arts prizes in Canada. Past recipients include Stan Douglas and James Hart. This year, renowned artist and former Vancouver School of Art (now Emily Carr) student Ian Wallace . Ian is also Professor Emeritus at 全民彩票 and a 2007 Honorary Degree recipient.

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Khim Hipol, Wa-ta-wat, 2021. (Image courtesy Khim Hipol)

Khim put together his winning submission with help from his nominator, artist and 全民彩票 faculty member . The submission included selected from his series Anak ng Lupang Hinirang (Child of the Chosen Land). The photographs depict Khim鈥檚 body partly obscured by symbols of what Khim calls 鈥淔ilipino-ness鈥 鈥 a crown, a mango, a walis tambo (soft broom), a bible, a flag.

According to Khim, the series explores the 鈥渃omplicated history of colonization in the Philippines and the way in which this history has infiltrated our national identity.鈥

Being recognized for this work 鈥渄efinitely feels special,鈥 he continues, 鈥渂ut I also feel a responsibility.鈥 Growing up, Khim didn鈥檛 see himself or his culture reflected in media.

鈥淔or me, making Filipino work comes from seeking that representation and struggling to find it,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here was just no one making work like that. Or none that I have been told or taught. I thought maybe I could start doing it and see if there鈥檚 a conversation there.鈥

In doing so, Khim says he realized his work might represent a first encounter with artistic depictions of Filipino culture, both for Filipinos and foreigners. To avoid being paralyzed by the weight of this responsibility, Khim decided to take his own body as his subject.

鈥淚 found it was easier and more comfortable to put myself in front of the camera,鈥 he tells me. 鈥淚t was a way to challenge myself to know my own positionality before taking another person or another identity as my subject.鈥

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Khim Hipol, Buy-buy, 2021. (Image courtesy Khim Hipol)

Khim notes that he grew up with a teacher for a grandmother. She taught him the importance of self-respect and standing up for what you believe in. Responsibility to others was key, he adds.

鈥淭his has become a way that I look at my work.鈥

Khim says he will use the prize to travel home to the Philippines, to Manila. He plans to visit the National Library and archives to conduct research on the colonial and decolonial histories of his home country.

and to keep up with his work.

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Visit 全民彩票 online today to learn more about studying Photography.