





Tim Smith, The Hutterites
Manitoba-based photographer and speaker Tim Smith has the most boring name in photography. For seventeen years he has documented life on the prairies, including fifteen years photographing the Hutterites, insular Anabaptists who live communally in colonies across Canada and the United States. His work is among the most extensive visual documentations of their culture and has been published and exhibited worldwide.
Tim’s presence in Romania at Bucharest Photofest carries a special historical resonance: the Hutterites once lived in Transylvania and Wallachia, and tracing their past here feels like closing a circle.
As part of the 500-year-anniversary of Anabaptism, Smith’s photographs are on display in Wittenberg, Germany, birthplace of the Protestant Reformation. He was the 2022 Donggang Photo Festival Artist of the Year and a featured speaker at the 2023 Xposure International Photo Festival in Sharjah, UAE. Portions of his prairie and Hutterite projects are held in collections such as Duke University’s Archive of Documentary Arts, the Province of Manitoba, and the permanent display at the Múzeum habánov v Sobotišti in Slovakia.
Beyond long-term projects, Smith speaks on slow journalism, photographing sensitive communities, and mental health in journalism. He also works on editorial and commercial assignments across the prairies and beyond. His awards include three National Newspaper Awards and a Judges Special Recognition in the prestigious Pictures of the Year International (POYI) Community Awareness Award.
Between 2022 and 2024, a series of talks, panels, and keynotes accompanied the international circulation of The Hutterites and In The World But Not Of It. Hosted in contexts such as the Museo Diocesano di Cremona, the Globe Photojournalism Summit, and the Festival della Fotografia Etica, these interventions foster reflection on long-term practice, ethics of representation, and the intersection of anthropology and documentary photography. They underline Smith’s commitment to transparency, contextualization, and co-responsibility in documentary work, offering insight into both process and the deeper cultural relationships behind the images.
About the artist
Tim Smith has been documenting Hutterite communities in North America. Descended from the 16th-century Radical Reformation in Tyrol, Austria, the Hutterites live communally on colonies across western Canada and the north-western United States. Their culture, preserved through separation from mainstream society, has flourished into one of the most successful periods in their 500-year history, with around 50,000 members. Tim’s presence in Romania at Bucharest Photofest carries a special historical resonance: the Hutterites once lived in Transylvania and Wallachia, and tracing their past here feels like closing a circle. This prosperity, however, brings challenges. Leaders fear that wealth and outside contact may erode traditions and values. Each colony must choose between holding to custom or adapting to an increasingly connected world. As Hutterite author Paul S. Gross wrote: “We cannot please the world and God at the same time… Either we take this world with all it offers... or else we take a better way.” Smith’s photographs reveal a complex society, far from stereotypes of simplicity. His lens captures youth culture, tradition, and resistance, offering a rare and nuanced glimpse into how Hutterite life balances faith, identity, and modern pressures.