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Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Photographer
Marie Tomanova
Young American
Gomma Photography Grant 2018 Winners

Gomma Photography Grant 2018

Young American

Photographer

Marie Tomanova

Young American

04 Feb, 2022


Marie Tomanova’s debut monograph (2019) and solo show (2018) Young American celebrates an idea of an “America” still rife with dreams and possibilities, hope and freedom. As a Czech immigrant struggling in a new environment to belong, to come to terms with her repressive past and her uncertain future, the portraits taken between 2015 and 2018 in New York City visualize an America in which individuality is valued as uniqueness and not judged as a lack of sameness. 

Young American resonates with directness, presence, and the ability to see deeply an individual with whom we can somehow identify. It is about optimism, youth, and the connection between people—the humanness that is essential to us all. To look deeply at Tomanova’s portraits and to see them looking deeply back at you is the heart of this work. Young American asserts the hope for a better future as an antidote to an oppressive and intolerant social and political situation in the United States and, perhaps, globally. Young American points not only to youth empowerment and the potent voice and presence that has emerged with it, but also to the welcome disintegration of any sort of set idea about identity. One could contextualize Tomanova’s Young American in the increasingly important and powerful voice of youth culture that is in the process of vitally reshaping gender, society, culture, and igniting a much-needed ideological revolution. 

As photographer Ryan McGinley writes in his introduction to the book Young American, “This is a future free of gender binaries and stale old definitions of beauty. In Marie’s world people can just simply be. I wish all of America’s youth culture looked like Marie’s photos of Downtown, diverse and inclusive.”

About the photographer

Marie Tomanova

Czech-born Marie Tomanova grew up in a South Moravian border town, Mikulov. After receiving a painting MFA she left to United States. Turning to photography displacement, identity, gender, and memory became key themes in her work. Her ongoing series of Self-portraits (2014-) address the sense of displacement and finding her place in the American landscape. Young American (2015-), first presented as a solo exhibition at Czech Center New York in 2018, focuses on individuality, identity, and belonging in the American social landscape. Her latest body of work, It Was Once My Universe (2018-), is an ongoing, deeply personal project about her returning home to the Czech Republic after 8 years in exile as an immigrant living in the United States. It was shown as part of her 2020 solo show by the same name at 35m2 in Prague, Czech Republic. A 2020 solo exhibition Live for the Weather at Tschechisches Zentrum Berlin brought together these multiple bodies of work, and was selected among the top five exhibitions of the European Month of Photography 2020 biennial.Tomanova's first book Young American (Paradigm Publishing 2019) featuring a foreword by acclaimed photographer Ryan McGinley sold out shortly after its publication. The art and fashion magazines overflowed with enthusiasm. Deftly entwining portraiture and landscape to recontextualize and expand the meaning of each, Tomanova now presents, with art historian Thomas Beachdel, her second volume New York New York (Hatje Cantz, 2021) with foreword by Kim Gordon.Tomanova currently lives and works in NYC. She is represented by C24 Gallery in the United States and the Republic of Turkey.