Architecture: Honorable Mention 2023 (professional)
ENTRY DESCRIPTION
Only two times in the 92-year history of the biggest tournament in soccer (football) has the event been hosted outside of Europe or the Americas. Thirteen and a half years ago, South Africa broke the trend as the first, with the sounds of seemly endless plastic horns (vuvuzelas) resonating around the nation from June to July.
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The World Cup is the most watched spectacle in sport, drawing over three billion viewers. Final matches receive almost ten times the spectators as the Super Bowl. But despite the fanfare, there is a constant dark cloud over FIFA, the sport’s governing body, due to bribery and corruption over the years. These wrongdoings typically involve host nation selections for the tournament. Countries see this event as a quick opportunity to make money and, more recently, “sportswash” their nation’s reputation to the rest of the world.
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Cape Town Stadium held eight matches in the 2010 tournament. It served as the stage for Ronaldo balancing the ball on his head before scoring against North Korea, Emile Heskey’s famous stepover against Algeria, and a Van Bronckhort’s screamer in the semi-finals.
After these moments pass, however, many host nations face the harsh reality that venues constructed for a one-month event are no longer needed as they were intended. World Cup matches require far greater capacity than domestic matches, and many of these stadiums are sparsely filled after the tournament, with some going completely unused.
Much of what remains are just the memories and echoes of the past.
AUTHOR
Eric's interest in photography began when his parents gave him an old film camera to use for his course in high school. While the class initially served as an escape from his rigorous biology and chemistry courses, it would eventually become the catalyst for each of his interests and passions melding into one. The film process revealed the "magic" of how science and technology could immortalize a scene in front of him. With this, his creative side would soon be unlocked.
Eric earned a Bachelor's Degree in Biology from Wake Forest University. He enjoyed his courses in physiology, molecular biology, and genetics, but it was ecology that grabbed his attention. The idea that life, across species and geographies, is intertwined resonated with him long after his classes concluded.
This concept has driven much of Eric's travel and work to date. He seeks to explore new cultures, new areas of the world, and unique wildlife with the hope that his images can deliver that same empowering idea to others that he felt in his studies — that we can all share some connection and hold interest in other people and living things, even when the link might not be apparent.
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