Meet ICP at AIPAD for a special conversation with Tarrah Krajnak, the 2026 Infinity Award Photographic Art and New Media Award honoree, alongside artists Rachelle Mozman, Martha Naranjo Sandoval, and Paola Martinez Fiterre. Moderated by ICP’s Associate Director of Exhibitions, Sara Ickow, the artists will discuss their relationship to their Latin American origin within performance and art-making.
This program is being hosted at AIPAD, located at Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10065. Learn more about ICP at AIPAD.
About AIPAD
Organized in 1979, AIPAD, with its global membership across six continents, is the collective expert voice for fine art photography dealers. Through its acclaimed education initiative, AIPAD Talks, and its flagship event, The Photography Show, the organization enhances the confidence of the public, museums, institutions and others in responsible fine art photography collecting. Presented by AIPAD, The Photography Show is the longest-running exhibition dedicated to the photographic medium in the world.
About ICP Infinity Awards
Since 1985, the ICP Infinity Awards have recognized major contributions and emerging talent in the fields of photojournalism, art, fashion photography, and publishing.
2026 Honorees
Joel Meyerowitz - Lifetime Achievement Award
Haruka Sakaguchi - Documentary Practice and Visual Journalism Awards
Collier Schorr - Commercial and Editorial Photography Award
Tarrah Krajnak- Photographic Art and New Media Award

About the Speakers

Tarrah Krajnak (b. 1979, Lima, Peru) is an artist working across photography, performance, and poetry. Krajnak lives and works in Los Angeles where she is an Associate Professor of Art at UCLA. She is currently a research fellow at the Wissenschaftkolleg zu Berlin. Krajnak is represented by Galerie Thomas Zander, Cologne/Paris. She is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Louis Roederer Discovery Award at Les Recontres d'Arles, a Lange-Taylor Prize from the Center for Documentary Studies, and a Howard Foundation Fellowship among other awards. She has published three books including El Jardín De Senderos Que Se Bifurcan (DAIS 2021), Master Rituals II: Weston's Nudes (TBW 2022) and RePose (FW Books 2023). Her work has been featured in Aperture, British Journal of Photography, The Eyes Journal, and European Photography. Krajnak’s work is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Tate Modern, London, Victoria & Albert Museum, London, Centre Pompidou, Paris, The Pinault Collection, Paris, Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Museum Brandhorst, Munich, Huis Marseille Museum of Photography, Amsterdam, and Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, among others.
Rachelle Mozman is the recipient of a NYFA/NYSCA award in 2025, the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship and the Aperture Creator Labs Photo Fund in 2024. She received the Colen Brown Art Prize and the Rema Hort Mann Foundation award in 2022. In 2021 she had a solo exhibition, All These Things I Carry with Me, at South Bend Museum, South Bend, IN. In 2020 Mozman released her monograph, Colonial Echo with Kris Graves Projects. In 2019 she had a solo exhibition, Metamorphosis of Failure at Smack Mellon, Brooklyn, NY. Mozman has been awarded residencies at LMCC workspace, Smack Mellon, Baxter St at CCNY, and Light Work. Mozman was awarded the NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship in 2019, the NYC Film and Media Grant from the Jerome Foundation in 2017 and others. Her work has been published in Aperture, Vogue, Contact Sheet, Presumed Innocence, Exit and numerous other publications.

Martha Naranjo Sandoval is a Brooklyn-based visual artist, photographer, publisher, and cataloger from Mexico City. Her work focuses on the family album as means of creating community around photography. She holds a degree in Film from Centro de Diseño, Cine y Televisión in Mexico City, and an MFA from the International Center of Photography and Bard College. In 2023 she presented the solo exhibition The Stench of Orange Blossoms at Miriam Gallery, and in 2024, Flowering Wound at Baxter Street Camera Club of New York as part of their Artist-In-Residency program. Her monograph Small Death, published by MACK, was shortlisted for the 2025 Paris Photo–Aperture PhotoBook First PhotoBook Award. One of her pieces was included in the landmark exhibition "The Brooklyn Artists Exhibition" at the Brooklyn Museum. She is the founder and director of the editorial project Matarile Ediciones, which publishes work by artists who are immigrants or part of a recent diaspora.
Paola Martínez Fiterre is a Cuban artist based in New York, whose practice focuses on the representation of the female body as shaped by the migratory experience. She studied at the Instituto Superior de Arte (ISA) in Havana and graduated from the International Center of Photography in 2019. She has received fellowships such as the Reed Foundation Fellowship for Cuban artists and, in 2023, the Cintas Foundation Fellowship in Photography. The work of Paola Fiterre offers an intimate reckoning with the body, identity, and the immigrant experience. Using her own body as both subject and medium; as a space of confrontation and contemplation. Her work is a reflection on the tension between personal and cultural identity, exploring themes such as migration, the female figure in a globalized society, and humanity’s relationship with the natural world. Fiterre’s work evokes a visceral response, drawing attention to the shared experience of “otherness” that transcends borders, cultures, and bodies.
Sara Ickow is the Associate Director of Exhibitions and Collections at the International Center of Photography and manages exhibitions and special projects for Women Photograph. Previously, she worked as a curatorial assistant and collections manager with the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery. She holds an MA in art history from NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts.
Image: Tarrah Krajnak, Self-Portrait as Weston/as Bertha Wardell, 1927/2020, from Master Rituals II: Weston’s Nudes, 8x10 Silver Gelatin Print, 2020. © Tarrah Krajnak & Zander Galerie