Winner announced for Marilyn Stafford Fotoreportage Award 2026

Photographer Johanna Alarcón has been awarded the prestigious Marilyn Stafford FotoReportage Award for 2026, for her photo essay When the Earth Gives Birth.

Photographer Johanna Alarcón has been awarded the prestigious Marilyn Stafford FotoReportage Award for 2026, for her photo essay When the Earth Gives Birth. The winning project documents Indigenous maternal healthcare in Ecuador through the stories of midwives, apprentices, and patients from AMUPAKIN and Partera di Anaku – the first Indigenous midwifery schools and hospitals in the Amazon and Andes.

The Marilyn Stafford FotoReportage Award, facilitated by FotoDocument and supported by Nikon Europe, is celebrating its 10th edition. To mark the occasion, there will be a special event taking place from 18–20 September at POST, Brighton & Hove’s new centre for photography and film. The programme will feature a retrospective display showcasing highlights from the past decade of winning projects, including an exhibition of work by the 2026 Award Winner, Johanna Alarcón, accompanied by an Artist Talk.

When the Earth Gives Birth documents midwifery as a response to maternal healthcare inequalities, racial discrimination, land dispossession, and the loss of ancestral knowledge across Ecuador. The project highlights Indigenous-led solutions as acts of reproductive sovereignty, cultural preservation, territorial defense, and resistance, offering globally relevant models for women’s, children’s, and Indigenous rights.

“It is with great joy that we announce that the 2026 Marilyn Stafford FotoReportage Award goes to Johanna Alarcón, says Nina Emett, FotoDocument founder, MSFA juror “The entire shortlist deserves recognition, and we are delighted to have awarded several Honourable Mentions. Johanna’s work stood out for the strength of its imagery, the original approach to storytelling, the under-reported subject, and her commitment to creating meaningful impact through close collaboration with grassroots Indigenous organisations. We are very proud to support the continued development of this remarkable body of work.”

Ruby Nicholson, Senior Communications Manager for Nikon Northern Europe, says: “Nikon is proud to support the Marilyn Stafford FotoReportage Award – now in its tenth year – which champions photographers creating impactful, solutions-focused stories. Johanna Alarcón’s inspiring work shines a light on Indigenous women’s resilience and the preservation of vital cultural knowledge, and exemplifies the kind of storytelling we are committed to supporting. We celebrate her dedication and look forward to seeing her project spark meaningful conversations worldwide.”

“Thank you FotoDocument and Nikon – I receive this award with the deep joy of knowing that what I love most co-exists – photography, motherhood, and spirituality – coming together in this project to give birth to an intimate story about the work of women and Indigenous peoples to sustain life in a context that destroys it,” says Alarcón. “Motherhood transformed the way I understand everything. The rage in the face of obstetric violence, the fear of loss, the feeling of not being heard. Becoming a mother taught me that the body, like the land, holds a memory that knows no borders and whose rights are constantly under threat. But it also gave me the love of an army of women who sustain life. My deepest thanks also go to the communities and organizations AMUPAKIN and Partera di Anaku for opening their doors to this story, and to the Ayün Fotógrafas collective, with whom we began this collective project on access to maternal healthcare in Latin America with the support of Eco Vist Projects and Plena Productions. Thanks for believing in me. Onward we go!”

HONOURABLE MENTIONS

Ana Caroline de Lima

Natela Grigalashvili

Ranita Roy

SHORTLIST

Ana Caroline de Lima

Birte Kaufman

Ginevra Bonina

Johanna Alarcón

Laura Pannack

Lea Greub

Natela Grigalashvili

Ranita Roy

Sara Swaty

Valeria Luongo

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A 35-year-old woman lies on a bed inside a kurma ghar, a mud and bamboo hut with a dilapidated roof, used as an isolation place for women and girls during menstruation in tribal villages, based on the belief of their supposed impurity. These huts lack essential services such as adequate beds, drinking water, toilets, and cooking facilities, and those staying there depend on family members for food and other necessities. At night, women risk abuse by men or potentially fatal accidents, such as snake bites. According to the NGO SPARSH, several women have died in recent years due to these practices. While not happy about having to stay there, women consider this experience normal, as their mothers and grandmothers also lived through the same situation. Fulbodi, Gadchiroli, Maharashtra, India, November 2025.
Maiko makes coffee for her guests, while her family is at the summer pastures
Lea Greub
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