From March 20 to April 26, 2026, the Bronx Documentary Center in New York will present Overfishing in Southeast Asia, a new exhibition by photojournalist Nicole Tung, winner of the 15th Carmignac Photojournalism Award. The project is the result of a nine-month investigation supported by the Fondation Carmignac, exploring one of the most critical yet often overlooked environmental crises of our time: the rapid depletion of marine ecosystems across Southeast Asia and the profound consequences this has for coastal communities and the global seafood economy.

© Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac
Presented in the Bronx Documentary Center’s main gallery, the exhibition reveals the complex network connecting local fishing ports in Asia with international markets. Southeast Asia today produces more than half of the world’s fish, making it one of the most important regions for global seafood supply. At the same time, its waters are among the most depleted and heavily contested. Through a combination of field reporting and documentary photography, Tung investigates how industrial fishing, weakened regulations and geopolitical pressures are reshaping both the marine environment and the lives of those who depend on it.

© Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac
Working across Thailand, the Philippines and Indonesia, Tung gained access to an industry that often remains hidden from public scrutiny, particularly at sea where large-scale fishing operations take place far from the oversight of regulators and journalists. Her photographs and reporting examine the environmental consequences of industrial fishing fleets, the gradual rollback of protective regulations, and the growing economic pressure faced by small-scale fishers who struggle to compete with globalized fishing operations.

© Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac
At the same time, the project sheds light on the often invisible workforce behind the seafood industry. Migrant laborers working on fishing vessels frequently endure difficult conditions and long periods at sea, forming a critical but largely unseen component of the global fishing economy. By documenting both environmental degradation and the human stories tied to it, Tung’s work reveals how ecological crises and labor issues are deeply interconnected.

© Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac
Environmental Crisis and Possible Solutions
The exhibition also reflects on possible responses to the crisis. Across Southeast Asia, new initiatives such as Marine Protected Areas, community-based fisheries management and alternative economic programs are being developed to restore ecosystems and sustain coastal livelihoods. Yet Tung’s investigation raises an essential question: can these initiatives keep pace with the accelerating pressures placed on the world’s oceans?

© Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac
By following the journey of fish from local harbors to international supply chains, Overfishing in Southeast Asiaexposes the fragile balance behind a food system that reaches consumers around the world. The project ultimately invites viewers to reconsider the hidden environmental and human costs embedded in everyday consumption.
Nicole Tung is a freelance photojournalist born in Hong Kong and a graduate of New York University. Over the past decade her work has focused primarily on conflict, human rights and the impact of war on civilian populations. She has reported extensively on the conflicts in Libya and Syria, the aftermath of ISIS in Iraq, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Her photography has been published in leading international outlets including The New York Times, The Washington Post and Harper’s Magazine. In 2025 she was part of a New York Times team named Pulitzer Prize finalists for Breaking News Photography. Tung is also the recipient of the Philip Jones Griffiths Award and the Carmignac Photojournalism Award, a prize created in 2009 by French entrepreneur Edouard Carmignac to support long-term investigative photojournalism projects addressing global human rights and geopolitical issues.

© Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac
The exhibition will take place at the Bronx Documentary Center, a non-profit gallery and educational space located in the South Bronx that has become an important cultural hub for socially engaged documentary photography. Since its founding, the center has used exhibitions, workshops and community programs to explore urgent social issues and encourage critical dialogue through visual storytelling.
Overfishing in Southeast Asia continues this tradition by presenting a powerful visual investigation into the environmental and human consequences of industrial fishing, encouraging visitors to reflect on the fragile ecosystems and communities that sustain the global seafood supply.
Exhibition Information
Overfishing in Southeast Asia – Nicole Tung
Bronx Documentary Center – Main Gallery
614 Courtlandt Ave, Bronx, New York
Dates: March 20 – April 26, 2026
Opening Reception: March 20, 2026, 6–9 PM
Gallery hours:
Thursday–Friday: 3–7 PM
Saturday–Sunday: 1–5 PM
Free admission.
Useful Links
Bronx Documentary Center
https://www.bronxdoc.org
Fondation Carmignac
https://www.fondationcarmignac.com
Carmignac Photojournalism Award
https://www.fondationcarmignac.com/en/photojournalism-award/
Nicole Tung Portfolio
https://nicoletungphoto.com
All images are © Nicole Tung for Fondation Carmignac
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