Showing posts with label photojournalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photojournalism. Show all posts

Saturday, February 11, 2012

The 2012 World Press Photo Contest Winners


View the entire collection of winning images from the 55th World Press Photo Contest here. The winners were selected from over 100,000 images submitted to the contest.


Click on images for a larger view
Vincent Boisot; Dakar Fashion Week (Senegal)

Vincent Boisot; Dakar Fashion Week (Senegal)



Stephanie Sinclair; Hajjah, Yemen

Stephanie Sinclair; Hajjah, Yemen



Damir Sagolj; South Hwanghae, North Korea

Damir Sagolj; South Hwanghae, North Korea



Jenny E. Ross; Cliff-Climbing Polar Bear Attempting to Eat Seabird Eggs (Novaya Zemlya, Russia)
Jenny E. Ross; Cliff-Climbing Polar Bear Attempting to Eat Seabird Eggs 
(Novaya Zemlya, Russia)



Brent Stirton; Rhino Wars (Tugela Private Game Reserve, Colenso, Natal, South Africa)
Brent Stirton; Rhino Wars (Tugela Private Game Reserve, Colenso, Natal, South Africa)


Tomasz Lazar; New York, USA

Tomasz Lazar; New York, USA


Ton Koene; Afghan Police Recruits (Kunduz, Afghanistan)

Ton Koene; Afghan Police Recruits (Kunduz, Afghanistan)



Yuri Kozryev; On Revolution Road (Libya)

Yuri Kozryev; On Revolution Road (Libya)



Ray McManus; Scrum Half (Dublin, Ireland)

Ray McManus; Scrum Half (Dublin, Ireland)



Adam Pretty; World Swimming Championships (Shanghai, China)

Adam Pretty; World Swimming Championships (Shanghai, China)


Samuel Aranda; Sanaa, Yemen (winner)
Samuel Aranda; Sanaa, Yemen (winner)

World Press Photo of the Year 2011 ~ By Photographer Samuel Aranda

New York Times photographer Samuel Aranda was announced the winner of the iconic World Press Photo competition on Friday.

The 55th annual jury of the World Press Photo contest selected Aranda's photograph of a woman consoling an injured male relative in Yemen as 2011's photo of the year. The woman is covered almost entirely by her burqa, by exception of small parts of her face and arms that seem to sneak out from beneath her robes. Aranda took the photograph in a Sanaa mosque that was being used as a hospital by demonstrators protesting against Yemen's President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The Times' Lens blog described the winning photograph as having the "feel of a Renaissance painting." Mr. Aranda told the Times that it was one of the first shots he took during his two months on assignment in Yemen. "The woman is not just crying. It was something more. You can feel that the woman is really strong," Aranda said of the female subject in his photograph.[via Huffington Post]


Image
The World Press Photo competition is one of the most famous competitions for photojournalists in the world.



Here are some more examples of  Samuel Aranda's fantastic work:

Police patrol al-Hasab neighborhood in the Yemeni city of Taizz on December 6, 2011.



Thursday, December 8, 2011

Free Digital Magazine ~ POSI+TIVE MAGAZINE ISSUE #8

"Posi+tive Magazine speaks about photos, stories, reportages, every fragment that tells what’s happening in the world through different points of view."

Compelling images inside. Have a look





*click on link to view magazine

Free Digital Magazine ~ POSI+TIVE MAGAZINE ISSUE #8

Posi+tive Magazine speaks about photos, stories, reportages, every fragment that tells what’s happening in the world through different points of view.




Thursday, December 1, 2011

Ben Lowy ~ Libya iPhone Photographs

Photojournalist Ben Lowy was in Libya on assignment for 3 weeks in March, traveling between the Rebel stronghold of Bengazi to various front line towns like Ajdabiya, Brega, Ras Lanuf, and Bin Jawad. In between photographing with DSLR’s he made images on his iPhone and brought the news directly to an audience by immediately posting them to his blog. Since featuring this new work, people’s interest has grown exponentially and, he says, “reaffirmed my belief in this new paradigm in journalism. My work these days, like Iraq from Humvee windows and Night Vision Goggles, abstracts of the BP oil spill, Holga panoramics and now this iPhone series, is about creating a visual narrative that looks different from the norm. I’m hoping to capture the audience through the aesthetics, to get them to move closer to the image, and most importantly engage the viewer to examine the content.” [via PDN]



























iSee
These images are a part of a project borne during my travels as a professional photojournalist. For years, I have worked with bulky digital cameras, always mindful of the technical maneuvers from setting the shutter speed and aperture to editing and toning on a computer screen. In the last two years I have discovered that my iPhone has allowed me to capture scenes without feeling that I am once again on the job. To “point and shoot” has been a liberating experience. It has allowed me to rediscover the excitement of seeing imperfections and happy accidents rendered through the lens of my handheld device. I am able to create imagery, edit, and transmit all these images, creating a modern and efficient workflow for the most inefficient of pursuits - self expression. ~ Ben Lowy







See more of Lowy's  iPhone series here

Monday, October 24, 2011

Photographer John Thomson ~ Stunning Photographs of 19th Century China.

John Thomson (1837-1921) was a pioneering Scottish photographer who, after traveling through various parts of Asia, settled in Hong Kong in 1868 and operated a studio there for the next four years. Using Hong Kong as his base, he traveled extensively throughout China and was the first known photographer to document the people and landscapes of China for publication in the western market. Returning to England, he published a four volume book entitled "Illustrations of China and its People" in London, 1873-1874.

Upon returning home, his work among the street people of London cemented his reputation, and is regarded as a classic instance of social documentary which laid the foundations for photojournalism. He went on to become a portrait photographer of High Society in Mayfair, gaining the Royal Warrant in 1881.

In recognition of his work, one of the peaks of Mount Kilimanjaro was named "Point Thomson" on his death in 1921. Some of Thomson's work may be seen at the Royal Geographical Society's headquarters in London.



Pepohoan of Formosa, by John Thomson c.1874





Chinese Woman of the Labouring Class, by John Thomson c.1874


Chinese Man of the Labouring Class, by John Thomson c.1874





Island Temple On The River Min, by John Thomson 1870/1871




Lung-hwa-ta, or Pagoda of the Dragon’s Glory, in Shanghai, by John Thomson c.1874




Fukien Temple, by John Thomson c.1874






The Ming Tombs, Nanking, by John Thomson c.1874


Tartar (Manchu) Artillery-men, by John Thomson c.1874


Nankow Pass, China, by John Thomson c.1874


Thomson's travels in China were often perilous, as he visited remote, almost unpopulated regions far inland. Most of the people he encountered had never seen a Westerner or camera before. His expeditions were also especially challenging because he had to transport his bulky wooden camera, many large, fragile glass plates, and potentially explosive chemicals. He photographed in a wide variety of conditions and often had to improvise because chemicals were difficult to acquire. His subject matter varied enormously: from humble beggars and street people to Mandarins, Princes and senior government officials; from remote monasteries to Imperial Palaces; from simple rural villages to magnificent landscapes.





The Abbot and Monks of Kushan Monastery, by John Thomson c.1874







Workers on the Silent Highway; The Crawlers; Cast Iron Billy, by John Thomson 1876-1877














































Thomson, King Mongkut of Siam


Then and now - contemporary views of John Thomson's Chinese photographs





Sheying: Shades of China 1850-1900. (Contemporaries of John Thomson)
Photography came to China at the start of the 1860s, introduced by foreigners but enthusiastically embraced by natives. In the decades leading up to the twentieth century, every incarnation of the new technology managed to replicate itself in the Chinese popular consciousness: formal landscapes, official portraiture, personal documentation, and architectural and street scenes. These extraordinarily rare images are the meat of Sheying: Shades of China 1850-1900.

The black-and-white photos, a mixture of work by transplanted Europeans and fledgling Chinese photographers, have the painterly shades and delicate composition of Europe’s ongoing pictorialism movement. But the pictures are unmistakably Chinese in subject matter. In a cramped Cantonese street, stall banners blot out the sky. Two prisoners pose stoically in cangues. There are countless images of harbors, filled with the bobbing handmade boats that powered the national economy. For all the influence the relatively established European photographers held, China proved itself to be an inimitable sitter. The collection provides a fascinating look at an empire before industrialization.