Griffith planners and students scoop up industry awards
Clean sweep continues at the Minister's Planning Awards.
Clean sweep continues at the Minister's Planning Awards.
Queensland College of Art photography alumnus Adam Ferguson has won a World Press Photo Award for his haunting portraits of Yazidi refugees in Iraq.
Zac Stubblety-Cook has been awarded Academic Athlete of the Year at Griffith's 2019 Blues Awards for Sporting Excellence.
A student-led recyclable art project and an socially responsible MBA program have been selected as finalists in the 2019 Green Gown Awards Australasia.
For Griffith students studying abroad, the destination isn't a place, but a new way of seeing things. One of the university's most successful short-term mobility programs is the annual photography in-field trip to Cambodia, where students spend time on assignment with local NGOs to capture the country's untold stories. Queensland College of Art Photography Program Director Dr Heather Faulkner has been recognised with a Griffith Internationalisation Award for her leadership of the program over the past eight years.
Queensland College of Art alumnus Adam Ferguson has scooped two of the world's most prestigious photography prizes for his striking portraits of Nigerian girls recruited as suicide bombers by Boko Haram. Adam was named Photographer of the Year at thePictures of the Year International competitionand took out top prize in the People and Stories category of theWorld Press Photoawards for the series of images commissioned by The New York Times.
Image of Evey Skinner’s work at the QCA Showcase, Foundation Studio. Image credit: Miriam Deprez Congratulations to all 2015 Queensland...
Raphaela Rosella, a 26-year-old Queensland College of Art graduate has won one of the world's most coveted photographic prizes.
Emerging Australian photographic talent, Raphaela Rosella, has been selected from a long list of entries from 53 countries to take part in the World Press Photo Joop Swart Masterclass.
A week of awards and industry recognition has confirmed the quality of work being undertaken at Griffith University’s School of Information and Communication Technology