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A series of powerful images that explore the pain of depression but also how to cope with it has been named as the winning entry for one of the UKs leading photography prizes. Arseniy Neskhodimov was on Wednesday named the winner of the Wellcome photography prize 2020, a competition to reward pictures that show the importance of health in society. This year there was a particular focus on mental health an issue, said organisers, that had become even more urgent because of coronavirus. Neskhodimov, who was born in Uzbekistan and lives in Moscow, is the overall winner for a series of five images titled Prozac. The photographs are self-portrait stories. They include him buried under a pile of Christmas trees, cowering below a table tennis table and taking a swim in the sea at Sharm el-Sheikh. The images, he said, are a kind of therapy that help me fight off the attacks of despair and loss of meaning, especially in this difficult pandemic time. Ive been trapped at home out of a job for three months and the only thing that brings some sense into my life is to keep taking pictures. Neskhodimov was born in 1981 and his work often touches on issues of disillusionment and alienation felt by the generation born in the early 1980s. They have been called xennials, a micro-generation who feel neither millennial or Gen X, people who had an analogue childhood followed by a digital adulthood. Miranda Wolpert, the head of Wellcomes mental health priority area, said: This incredibly powerful series highlights the complexity of both emotions and coping mechanisms underpinning each persons journey into their mental health. Neskhodimovs visually arresting series manages to convey both the ongoing pain he experiences and the strategies to cope including humour and creativity. Jeremy Farrar, the director of the Wellcome Trust and chair of judges, said mental health was still an issue surrounded by stigma. When subjects stay in
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