In The Public Eye

 
 

As part of the Fund’s Education and Awareness program, our work focuses on support for photography and photojournalism programs for youth that bring together three aspects: education, awareness, and mentoring. We support work in communities that are often underrepresented in newsrooms and in journalism. We believe in the strength of local partnerships with organizations that share our mission. One such partnership is with UPI’s Photoville, which provides an accessible annual venue for photographers and audiences from every walk of life to engage with each other, and experience thought-provoking photography from across the globe – with free admission for all. In the Public Eye highlights past exhibitions featuring the Fund’s awardees.

 

Witness, Tamir Kalifa
Photoville, NYC, 2025


The Chris Hondros Fund is proud to sponsor the opening night of Photoville this year with a special preview of WITNESS by photojournalist and CHF Awardee Tamir Kalifa. Through
live projections and music, Kalifa weaves his images with his original songs to trace stories
of migration, survival, loss, and hope. WITNESS is a powerful multimedia performance that invites audiences into the intimate moments behind the headlines.

A Persisting Witness
Photoville, NYC, 2019

The Chris Hondros Fund has awarded these photojournalists for their work documenting stories that bring shared human experiences into the public eye with a compassionate lens. As attacks on the press intensify at an alarming rate, CHF believes more than ever in supporting photojournalists who remain diligent and continue to report on issues critical to our world, inform the public, and defend press freedom. A Persisting Witness hopes to show the vital role photojournalists play, often at great personal risk, in securing our access to stories that might go otherwise unnoticed or unreported.

Where Do We Go From Here?
Photoville, NYC, 2020
When it is the photojournalist’s job to document the world’s news events, what happens when a new, deadly disease spreads across the world and threatens nearly everyone and everything — including the photographer?