Hong Kong Photozine & Photobook Dummy Award 2025 Winners and Shortlist Announcement

Winners and Shortlist Announcement


Photozine and Photobook represent another unique language of visual creation. From experimental works to heartfelt visual stories documenting everyday life, this year’s open call received nearly 200 submissions, including entries from over 30 countries and regions. These works not only showcase the talent and passion of the creators but also highlight how visual publishing bridges cultures and dialogue. 

This year, the “Hong Kong Photozine Award” has been newly introduced. A photozine, though lightweight and handy, holds profound depth and limitless potential within its simplicity. The winning and shortlisted works reinterpret “Hong Kong” from diverse perspectives, presenting the creators’ emotions, stories, and reflections on the city. Each piece is a journey of exploration, with innovative approaches to both storytelling and craftsmanship, demonstrating the vitality of Hong Kong’s visual storytelling.


Hong Kong Photobook Dummy Award 2025 Winners



Hong Kong Photobook Dummy Award 2025 Shortlisted Works


Hong Kong Photozine Award 2025 Winners (Open Category)


Gold Medal

The Folio (Vol.1) – Winged Walls

by Pak Hang Wong 黃百亨[HK]

Special Mention

回家 Going Home

by Natia Ser 佘沅珈 [HK/US]

Hong Kong Photozine Award 2025 Shortlisted Works (Open Category)


/ HK Photozine Award 2025 (Open Category) /


“Frozen Resilience” by Chris Wong 黄海輝 (AU)
“日落紅塵 After Sun” by Colin Lau (HK)
“Fragment of Passing” by Ho Yan Lee 李浩恩 (HK)
“在你腦海中曬相 Developing Film in Your Mind” by Dory Cheng 鄭多莉 (HK)

Hong Kong Photozine Award 2025 Winners (Student Category)


Hong Kong Photozine Award 2025 Shortlisted Works (Student Category)



/ HK Photozine Award 2025 (Student Category) /

“The Adventure of an Orange” by Lang Chen 陳朗 (HK)
“夜晚” by Lam Yan Lam 林琳欣 (HK)
“門” by Pak Shing Chiu 趙柏丞 (HK)
“天眼” by Hsuan Ying Lai 賴宣穎 (HK)
“E” by Tung Yan Wu 吳彤恩 (HK)

 Hong Kong Photobook Festival 2025 Programme Schedule

In addition to the three-day photobook market and exhibition, a series of book launches, talks, and workshops will also be held—everyone is welcome to participate!

🔗Register now:https://www.eventbrite.com/o/lumenvisum-33404470855

The organiser will implement crowd control measures. To attend talks, workshops, or other activities, please register online in advance, as only a limited number of walk-in spots will be available. For details, please refer to the Hong Kong Photobook Festival’s social media channels.

Hong Kong Photobook Market 2025

2 May (Fri) – 4 May (Sun) 2025

2 May (Fri)|1500 – 2000

3 May (Sat)|1100 – 2000

4 May (Sun)|1100 – 1800

PMQ

35 Aberdeen Street, Central, Hong Kong

OPEN CALL FOR PHOTOZINE AND PHOTOBOOK DUMMY AWARD 2025 – APPLICATION GUIDELINES 

The Photobook Dummy Award is one of the highlights of the Hong Kong Photobook Festival, which aims to support emerging artists and provide them with opportunities to showcase their work at international festivals.  This year photographers, artists and creative talents from all over the world are as usual invited to submit their works.  Thanks to the support of various partners, the winning and shortlisted dummies from previous year have been toured and exhibited in numerous places, included but not limited to New Zealand, Germany, India, Taiwan, Denmark, Spain, the Netherlands, Italy. 

In addition the Photobook Dummy Award, this year we are excited to introduce the newly launched “Photozine Award” which aims at encouraging more people, especially the youth, to join the photozine creation and publication sectors.  The worldwide open call for Photozine Award is divided into Open and Student Categories.  Specifically, the Student Category is targeting at open recruits of works from students at various levels globally. 

About the selection scheme, jury from the Photobook Dummy Award will shortlist at most 15 finalists in the first round, while for the Photozine Award, 10 finalists from each category will be shortlisted. Eventually 3 winners for the Photobook Dummy Award and each of the two Photozine Award Categories will be selected among the finalists. 

All the finalists’ works will be exhibited at the Hong Kong Photobook Festival 2025.  Winners can utilise this opportunity to have professional exchange with the jury and also share their creation process with the participating audience. 

Submission Deadline 

Participants should submit their works with their submission form(s) so that the package arrives at Lumenvisum’s office by 15th February 2025 (Hong Kong Time) (by post or in person). Please allow ample time to enter and mail your works. Late submissions will not be considered by the jury. 

Prizes  

  1. Winner’s dummies/zines and other shortlisted dummies/zines will be exhibited in the Hong Kong Photobook Festival 2025.  
  1. The winner of the First Prize of Photobook Dummy will be granted a maximum subsidy of HKD$20,000 for participation in the visit of the international photobook festival; or self-published photobooks. 
  1. The winner of the First Prize of Photozine will be granted a maximum subsidy of HKD$3000 (per category) for participation in the visit of the international photobook festival; or self-published photozines. 

Entry Fees  

  1. The application fee is waived this year. 
  1. Costs of shipping are covered by the applications and are not refundable. 

Eligibility  

Photobook Dummy Award 

  1. The Award is open to photographers, artists, designers and all the creative talents from worldwide. 
  1. There is no specific age and nationality limit for entering the Award.  
  1. The photobook dummy can be done individually or collectively. 
  1. The photobook dummy must be original. 
  1. The photobook dummy must be self-published or unpublished. It cannot be published by any registered publisher or has never been committed to being published by any other publisher.  
  1. ISBN and is not a requirement for the Award. 
  1. The photobook dummy can be presented in any language. 
  1. The photobook dummy must be created on or after the 1st of January 2022. 

Photozine Award (General and Student Category) 

  1. The Award is open to photographers, artists, designers and all the creative talents. 
  1. The theme of this year’s Photozine Award is “Hong Kong” 
  1. Applying for Open or Student Category: There is no specific age and nationality limit for entering the Award, while the Student Category is open to full-time students only. Please upload your student identity card or other proof in your application. 
  1. The photozine can be done individually or collectively.  All candidates in a group must be students if they are submitting jointly under the Student Category. 
  1. The photozine must be original. 
  1. The photozine must not exceed 32 pages. 
  1. The photozine must be self-published or unpublished. It cannot be published by any registered publisher or has never been committed to being published by any other publisher.  
  1. The photozine can be presented in any language. 
  1. The photozine must be created on or after the 1st of January 2024. 

Important Note 

  • Applicants may apply for both awards.  However, every work is only eligible for one award’s application (i.e. either Photobook Dummy Award, Student Category or Open Category of Photozine Award). 
  • Each applicant can only submit one entry for each award. 
  • All shortlisted work will be featured in various exhibitions globally. In order to ensure the pieces’ good condition throughout the tour, shortlisted applicants need to submit a second physical copy of their works to the organiser. This second copy should arrive at Lumenvisum within 21 days after the announcement of the shortlist. 
  • The organiser is not responsible for any damage of the works during the exhibition. 

Timeline 

1st October 2024Applications Opening 
15th February 2025 at 18:00 (HKT, UTC/GMT: +8:00)Applications Closing 
April 2025Finalists Announcement
May 2025Winners Announcement

Application Procedure 

Step One – Online Registration 

  1. Fill in the online submission form below. Upload the PDF file including all pages of the book/zine and the image of the book/zine cover. Please provide the photos of book/zine cover as shown in the instruction below:   
  1. The form must be completed either in Chinese or English. 
  1. The form must be submitted before the submission of the physical copy. 
  1. Print the acknowledgement of receipt or confirmation message as a proof of successful registration.  

 
Step Two – Submission of Physical Copy – Pack your photobook dummy/photozine  

  1. Your submission should include (i) a physical copy of your photobook dummy/photozine; and (ii) a registration proof.  
  1. All the items for submission must be packed in a sealed envelope.  
  1. Mark “Hong Kong Photobook Dummy Award 2025” or “Hong Kong Photozine Award 2025” on the envelope.  

Step Three – Submission of Physical Copy – By Post or In Person 

Submission by Post  Submission in Person 
For submission by post, the package must arrive at the following address by 15th February 2025. All incomplete or late entries will be declined. For submission in person, the applicant should submit the physical copy within the opening hours* of Lumenvisum.  
Address Lumenvisum Company Limited L2-02 Jockey Club Creative & Arts Centre 30 Pak Tin Street,  Shek Kip Mei,  Kowloon, Hong Kong. 
N/A *Opening Hours  
Monday to Friday (09:30-13:00 & 14:00-18:00) Saturday, Sunday & Public holidays (11:00-13:00 & 1400-1800)  

PHOTOBOOK DUMMY AWARD 2025 JUDGE

*In no particular order

Andreas Müller-Pohle  

Andreas Müller-Pohle is a Berlin-based media artist and publisher. He is the founder of European Photography, an independent art magazine for international contemporary photography, new media and artificial intelligence, which celebrates its 45th anniversary this year. He has edited the major works of media philosopher Vilém Flusser, including the seminal Philosophy of Photography. Andreas has published and exhibited extensively, and his photographic, video, and computer works are in numerous private and museum collections worldwide. He has been a visiting professor and lecturer at numerous institutions in Europe, North and South America, and Asia. His current theoretical and practical focus is on the intersection of photography and artificial intelligence.  

Charis Poon 

Charis Poon is an artist and educator who makes zines, audio pieces, draws comics, writes, and teaches. Across these media, her practice focuses on the everyday, on contemplation, on close relationships. Charis worked as a freelance graphic designer and editor for most of her professional career, with forays in creative strategy and podcasting. After finishing her MA in Design Expanded Practice at Goldsmiths University of London, she moved back to Hong Kong, where she calls home. Now, she teaches Social Design at the PolyU School of Design where she experiments with how teaching and learning takes place. She is interested in poetics in communication, learning through making, slow growth, and collective endeavors. 

Kurt Tong 

Kurt was born in Hong Kong in 1977 and earned his MA in Documentary Photography at the London College of Communication in 2006. His projects explore his Chinese roots and understanding of his motherland.  

Since then, he has published several monographs exploring themes ranging from Chinese funeral offerings to the Asian diaspora to self-combed women. His work has been shown worldwide, including exhibitions at the Himalayas Museum in Shanghai, the Times Art Museum in Beijing, the Finnish Museum of Photography, Rencontres d’Arles, and The Photographers’ Gallery in London. 

In 2022, he was awarded the prestigious Prix Elysee and released “Dear Franklin,” an epistolary novel about a tragic love story during WWII in China. MOMA New York named it one of the best photo books of 2022. In 2024, he published “Krampus,” a book about the Alpine Christmas monster, which was accompanied by a multi-sensory exhibition alongside a concert in Innsbruck, Austria. 

Michelle Chan  

© Michelle Chan (littledotrice) Photography. All Rights Reserved

Michelle Chan is a relational artist who works primarily in photography. She uses the camera and manipulated images to generate connections and conversations with people. Her works often touch upon the notion of home, sense of belonging, human connections and bonding, and familial relationships. More specifically, they reflect the inherited familial beliefs that inform our daily gestures and rituals, and explore the Chinese beliefs that have become recurrent over centuries. She is the founder of Phoboko, a platform that brings people together through photobooks and the topics they contain. As a community, Phoboko interrogates photography as a medium, promotes the vision of local Hong Kong artists while in dialogue with other photographers in the Asia-Pacific region. 

Zhen SHI 

Zhen SHI works across various mediums, combining photography, book objects, and fiction-documentary narratives to create a complex interplay of storytelling. Through the artificial manipulation of individuals’ lived experiences and intervention in intellectual legacies, her practice explores the intricate relationship between reality and memory, often within the broader themes of “Archive and Fiction” and “Private and Public.” 

In 2015, Shi founded La Maison de Z, a French publishing house dedicated to visual art, contemporary photography, and independent publications, using publishing as a form of research, examining the intricate dynamics between memory and reality. From concept to design, visual imagery to material choices, La Maison de Z continually pushes the boundaries of paper as a medium while investigating the role of art books as a unique language. 

Zhuang Wubin 

6 July 2019 / Jakarta Courtesy Evan Andraws Latief

Zhuang Wubin is a writer who makes photographs, publications and exhibitions. He is interested in photography’s entanglements with modernity, colonialism, nationalism, “Chineseness” and the Cold War in Southeast Asia and Hong Kong.  

Zhuang is a recipient of the Prince Claus Fund research grant (2010) and a Lee Kong Chian research fellow at the National Library Board (NLB) of Singapore (Dec 2017 to Jun 2018). He is the major grantee of The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Greater China Research Grant 2018. He has been invited to research residency programmes at Institute Technology of Bandung (2013), Asia Art Archive (AAA), Hong Kong (2015), Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts, Taiwan (2017) and the Ha Bik Chuen Archive Project at AAA (2018). He is the contributing curator of the Chiang Mai Photo Festival (2015, 2017, 2020).  

Published by NUS Press, Photography in Southeast Asia: A Survey (2016) is his fourth book.  

PHOTOZINE AWARD 2025 JUDGE

*in no particular order

Charis Poon 

Charis Poon is an artist and educator who makes zines, audio pieces, draws comics, writes, and teaches. Across these media, her practice focuses on the everyday, on contemplation, on close relationships. Charis worked as a freelance graphic designer and editor for most of her professional career, with forays in creative strategy and podcasting. After finishing her MA in Design Expanded Practice at Goldsmiths University of London, she moved back to Hong Kong, where she calls home. Now, she teaches Social Design at the PolyU School of Design where she experiments with how teaching and learning takes place. She is interested in poetics in communication, learning through making, slow growth, and collective endeavors. 

Michelle Chan  

© Michelle Chan (littledotrice) Photography. All Rights Reserved

Michelle Chan is a relational artist who works primarily in photography. She uses the camera and manipulated images to generate connections and conversations with people. Her works often touch upon the notion of home, sense of belonging, human connections and bonding, and familial relationships. More specifically, they reflect the inherited familial beliefs that inform our daily gestures and rituals, and explore the Chinese beliefs that have become recurrent over centuries. She is the founder of Phoboko, a platform that brings people together through photobooks and the topics they contain. As a community, Phoboko interrogates photography as a medium, promotes the vision of local Hong Kong artists while in dialogue with other photographers in the Asia-Pacific region. 

Paul Yeung 

Paul Yeung Tak-ming is a freelance photographer, an educator and a curator. He graduated from MA in Image and Communication (Photography) at Goldsmiths College, London. Yeung embarked on his profession as a photojournalist and photo editor and received numerous photography awards in the past 20 years. His contemporary works mostly concern social situation expressed in a humorous sense and are interested in the genres, narrative and appropriation of photographic language. Yeung opened his first solo photography exhibition “The Flower Show” in 2012. He published his first photobook “Yes Madam, Sorry Ah Sir” in 2017. Yeung was also one of the founding members of several local independent photozines, including “Mahjong”, “Not Accord With…” and “Fu Pao Mary”. His other favorite works include “The Advertising Billboard is Nothing”, “The Good Old Days in 1989”, “No Paint No Games”, “Dark Light” etc., His works and photobooks were exhibited internationally and were collected by The Hong Kong Heritage Museum and private collectors. 

HONG KONG PHOTOBOOK DUMMY AWARD TOURING EXHIBITION– Jarkata, Indonesia|Pentas Buku Foto

Our shortlisted dummy photobooks have arrived at the seventh worldwide stop – Jakarta, Indonesia and will be exhibited at the Pentas Buku Foto until 29 February! For more event details, please visit their official website.

Exhibition Details:

——

Date : 1 – 29 February 2024

Venue : ITC Fatmawati, blok F no.16

Hong Kong Photobook Dummy Award Touring Exhibition– Goa, India|Sunaparanta Art Centre

Our shortlisted dummy photobooks have arrived at the sixth worldwide stop – Gao, India and will be exhibited at the Library, Sunaparanta Goa Centre for the Arts until 23 December! For more event details, please visit Sunaparanta Art Centre.

Exhibition Details:

——

Date : 8 – 23 December 2023 (Mon – Sat)

Time : 11:00 – 18:30

Venue : Library, Sunaparanta Goa Centre for the Arts

Hong Kong Photobook Dummy Award Touring Exhibition – New Delhi, India|Khoj Studios

Our shortlisted dummy photobooks have arrived at the fifth worldwide stop – New Delhi, India and will be exhibited at the Khoj Studios from 24 November to 1 December! This is the very first time bringing the shortlisted and winning titles of the Hong Kong Photobook Dummy Award to India, many thanks for the arrangement of Offset Projects! For more information about Offset Projects, please visit https://offsetprojects.in/ .

Exhibition Details:

——

Offset Projects: PHOTOBOOK EXHIBIT

Opening : 24 November 2023, 16:00 – 20:00

Date : 25 November – 1 December 2023 (Mon – Sat)

Time : 11:00 – 19:00

Venue : Project Space, Khoj Studios, New Delhi


When the Waves Are Gone

by

Christian BABISTA

from Philippines


About the Book

It’s difficult to see the life that departed family members had beyond the stories and family photos that surround them. My own father had to leave my family to provide for us, just as his own father did as a seaman—their own unique experiences obscured by distance and time to those that love them. And yet, in some odd twist of fate, I discovered that my own grandfather had a penchant capturing life…his life…in ways that I never imagined.

Through his eyes, and now mine, this book’s intro reads:

“For the waves that continue to ebb and flow.
To remember the time that has passed,
Telling ourselves to forget
The beautiful and the bad of what has happened.
I realized how life is a voyage through the ocean. It is a continuous crashing of waves, and regardless of the journey, we all end up in the shores.

‘In this type of job, your other foot will always be left in the sea.’

My grandfather said these lines to me when I was a kid.
And since then I have always wondered what they meant.

As I grew older I slowly realized that when you set sail, there is always a risk of drowning and never coming back. You never know what’s going to happen. Like waves, you never know if you will be able to go back to your family or you will end up swallowed by the ocean.

I am using my grandfather’s photos to reconstruct his journey and to find closure to the questions he left unanswered when I was a kid.

At the same time, new, deeper questions began to form as I sifted through his photos.

What is it like to be someone whose other foot will always be left in the sea?”



The Wave

by

Sunik KIM

from South Korea


About the Book

**The word ‘Ajumma’ means middle aged women in Korea

In the 1930s, the hair perm culture began in Korea. The culture that only few wealthy people could do, became a general style for Korean women after the Korean War. Since most people were poor, they keenly wanted to do hair perm as strong as possible which would keep the curl longer. In my childhood, most women around me have had this shape of hair and they couldn’t get out of this even as time passes. This is called “Ajumma perm” in Korea now.

I always said it’s way too out of trend and tacky, whenever mom asked me about her shape of hair whether it’s good or not. However she had a strong will. She went to a hair shop to get a strong curl again, if the curl got loose even a little. It seemed to be her obsessional duty, as if she always feels pressure that she has to work hard to feed her family. One day, I was curious how this shape of hair could represent the generations and my curiosity got changed to an obsession that made me photograph them. At some point, she doesn’t get the hair perm again, probably from when she didn’t need to work hard to care for her family anymore. On the contrary I work hard to seek what’s hidden in the tangled and wavy things though. Sometimes, she spends time with her older sisters and apparently they are telling her that her hair looks poor and too straight. The temptation of the perm still fights in her mind like the wave in the sea that fluctuates endlessly.



Hong Kong Photobook Dummy Award 2023

Winners & Shortlisted Photobooks


As one of the key activities of the 2nd Hong Kong Photo Book Festival (HKPBF), Hong Kong Photobook Dummy Award 2023 aims to support emerging photographers and artists by providing a local and international platform for photographic works displaying. This year, we are honoured to have renowned local and overseas photographers and artists serve as judges. Including Andreas Müller Pohle, the founder and editor-in-chief of “European Photography” magazine; Kurt Tong, a famous contemporary artist; Lau Ching-ping, the former chairman of the Hong Kong International Photography Festival; Yanyou Yuan Di, the founder of Jiazazhi Press, and Zhuang Wubin, a Singapore independent curator.  

Thanks to the success of the 1st HKPBF, the competition caught more overseas photographers’ and artists’ eyeballs and submitted their works. We have received more than 130 entries from local and overseas, and the judging stage is in full swing. The judges had selected 15 shortlisted works, 4 works in the midst have been awarded the Gold Medal, Silver Medal, Bronze Metal, and Special Mention!  


WINNERS



SHORTLIST