Shannon Johnstone

Photographer
Location: Cary, NC
Nationality: USA
Biography: Shannon Johnstone is a tenured professor at Meredith College in Raleigh, North Carolina. Her photographic work deals with themes that reclaim what has been discarded and make visible that which is hidden.  Landfill Dogs   has been... MORE
Private Story
Jo-Anne McArthur
Copyright Shannon Johnstone 2024
Updated Jun 2021

In a recent interview, photojournalist  Jo-Anne McArthur, said, “I do not take photographs of animals. I take photographs for animals.” This is a powerful, courageous distinction. The first tells a story. The second advocates. And Jo-Anne McArthur has relentlessly and fearlessly advocated for animals since 1998. As a gifted photojournalist, Jo-Anne boldly tells the complicated and often painful stories of our relationship with non-humans. She has travelled to all seven continents documenting the use and abuse of animals around the globe. This work has been featured globally and by hundreds of media outlets and campaigns. Jo-Anne has received numerous awards including being named “Wildlife Photographer of the Year” three times (various categories); winning the Special Jury Prize in the 2018 Global Peace Awards; and most recently her photograph, “Hope in a Burned Plantation” (included in this submission) was awarded the 2021 Grand Prize Winner in the BigPicture Natural World Photography Competition. It is easy to understand why her work has garnered this attention. Her captivating photographs bring the viewer eye-level with her subjects who are the souls “hidden” in our midst including animals consumed for food; performing as entertainment; and experimenting on for science. All of Jo-Anne’s photographic work is part of her lifetime project called “We Animals”—a project that she gives away for free (more on that below). Her work is nothing short of heroic and inspirational, and that is why I am honored to nominate her for the 2021 Anja Niedringhaus Courage in Photojournalism Award. 


Jo-Anne’s photographs are remarkable and fearless. They ask the viewer to bear witness to the suffering we have ignorantly or willfully ignored. In doing so, we are compelled to feel with the animals, and take action. This empathy is created through carefully crafted compositions, expert control over natural light, and a perspective that places the viewer with these animals. (Analyzing empathy in visual art is part of my scholarship as a photography professor. Most recently I wrote a paper on Principles of Empathy in Art and I used Jo-Anne’s work as exemplars in defining these three principles.) Because of these visual choices, we feel along with souls in Jo-Anne’s images, and without a hint of misanthropy. In fact, Jo-Anne’s photographs show love and wonder for all life, similar to Anja Niedringhaus. Also like Anja Niedringhaus, Jo-Anne’s work is infused with kindness and empathy as she courageously approaches her subjects with a “kind heart” and “fierce spirit”. 


I have selected 12 images that use these principles and show Jo-Anne’s photographic strengths, courage in visual storytelling, with artistic sensitivity and compassion. These images also feature the 2020 winner of Nature Photographer of the Year, and a selection of work in her recent book Hidden: Animals in the Anthropocene, which was awarded “Photography Book of the Year” by Pictures of the Year International (PoYI).


Last, but not least, Jo-Anne photographs in the most deplorable and  stressful conditions. She photographs undercover in factory farms, overheated animal transport trucks, slaughter houses, and meat markets; other times she situates herself in the middle of wildfires or floods in order to tell the stories of the individuals who have been left behind otherwise been erased. Like other war photographers, Jo-Anne exhibits courage in putting herself in harm’s way to tell an important story.  And most remarkably, all of this work is made available for the public to download and use for free. I admire this commitment because her work does not feed into the commodification of animals, nor is she profiting from these animals’ suffering. This is a unique stance to take as a photojournalist, and another one of the courageous reasons I am nominating her for this award.