Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

Farzana Hossen is a photographer, visual artist, and documentary storyteller based in Bangladesh. Her work often explores human rights, gender inequality, oppression, conflict, intimacy, uncertainty, loss, grief, and trauma, focusing on women in cultural contexts that often leave them in the margins.

Farzana is an alumna of Pathshala South Asian Media Institute in Dhaka, the Photoart Institute in Chattogram, Bangladesh, and the Angkor Photo Workshops in Siem Reap, Cambodia. Her work has been recognized and supported through numerous accolades. In 2013, she received the Ian Parry Scholarship Grant and the silver award in the Documentary category from the College Photographer of the Year. She also received the Alexia Foundation Student Award of Excellence in 2014 and was named Getty Images Emerging Talent for 2013-2014. She was a Magnum Foundation Photography and Social Justice Fellow in 2020 and a Chobi Mela Fellow in 2021.

Farzana engages with a diverse array of mediums to illustrate her works. Her works incorporate photography, video, archival materials, as well as innovative techniques such as alternative printing methods and hand-stitching on photographs printed on paper and textiles. This multifaceted approach allows her to create deeply immersive and textured visual narratives.

Her work has garnered national and international recognition, being featured in esteemed publications such as The Sunday Times Magazine (UK), The Guardian (UK), The Daily Star (Forum) (Bangladesh), The New Age (Bangladesh), Greenpeace Magazine (Hamburg), and Fokus Magazine (Sweden). Additionally, Farzana’s art has been exhibited at numerous festivals, academies, and museums worldwide and is part of the permanent collection at the China Academy of Fine Arts Museum (CAFA).

Currently, Farzana is an Advisory Committee member of the Ian Parry Photojournalism Grant. She is a contributing photographer for The Guardian (UK) and The New Humanitarian (Switzerland)

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