Tag: photography

March 29 2016

Open and Youth Competition Winners of the 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

The world’s biggest photography competition, the Sony World Photography Awards, just announced the thirteen winners of their Open and Youth categories. In total, the 2016 awards received a record-breaking 230,103 submissions. The ten Open and three Youth winners were selected from a total of 103,005 entries. The overall Open and Youth Photographer of the Year will be announced on April 21. These winning images will be exhibited at London’s Somerset House from April 22 to May 8.

Looking at the winning images of photo competitions like this inspire me to keep pursuing photography. The Open competition is meant for photography enthusiasts, not professionals in the industry. The youngest winner in the whole competition is in Youth. Under the Environment category, Anais Stupka from Italy is just 12-years-old!

I’ll never tire of looking at photos. I feel blessed that I get to explore such a powerful and artistic medium.

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Kei Nomiyama, Winner, Low Light, Japan, 2016

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Alex Ingle, Winner, Smile, United Kingdom, 2016

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Alexandre Meneghini, Winner, People, Brazil, 2016

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Markus van Hauten, Winner, Panoramic Germany, 2016

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Swee Choo Oh, Winner, Arts and Culture, Malaysia, 2016

It was one of those brisk wintery days in March 2015. Everyone was already tired of the long and tough winter here in the north east. Amazed by how clear the day was I took my Cessna above New York's restricted airspace, which gave me a full freedom to roam. The winds were quite strong that day with no haze and unlimited visibility. With a bit of planning (and luck) I was able to capture perfect shadow alignment along the avenues - I had only one chance to capture - they were shifting fast.

Filip Wolak, Winner, Architecture, Poland, 2016

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Andrej Tarfila, Winner, Travel, Slovenia, 2016

Planned Obsolescence

Pedro Diaz Molins, Winner, Enhanced, Spain, 2016

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Chaiyot Chanyam, Winner, Split Second, Thailand, 2016

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Michaela Smidova, Winner, Nature & Wildlife, Czech Republic, 2016

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Sepehr Jamshidi Fard, Winner, Culture, Iran, Islamic Republic of, 2016

Sarah, my sister, December 28th, 2015.

Sam Delaware, Winner, Portraiture, United States, 2016

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Anais Stupka, Winner, Environment, Italy, 2016

Sony World Photography Awards website

March 24 2016

10 Tips on How To Take Better Photos

My go-to photography blog, Petapixel, recently released an article titled 40 Tips to Take Better Photos. There are lots of great gems in there. I’ve reduced the list down to 10 of my favorites.

Shoot every day
The best way to hone your skills is to practice. A lot. Shoot as much as you can – it doesn’t really matter what. Spend hours and hours behind your camera. As your technical skills improve over time, your ability to harness them to tell stories and should too. 
Don’t worry too much about shooting a certain way to begin with. Experiment. Your style – your ‘voice’ – will emerge in time. And it will be more authentic when it does. — Leah Robertson

See the light
Before you raise your camera, see where the light is coming from, and use it to your advantage. Whether it is natural light coming from the sun, or an artificial source like a lamp; how can you use it to make your photos better? How is the light interacting with the scene and the subject? Is it highlighting an area or casting interesting shadows? These are all things you can utilise to make an ordinary photo extraordinary. 



Buy books, not gear
Having expensive camera equipment doesn’t always mean that you’ll take good photos. I’ve seen some absolutely amazing images shot with nothing more than a smart phone. Instead of having ten different lenses, invest in some fantastic photography books. By looking at the work of the masters, not only do you get inspired, you come away with ideas to improve your own photos.

Slow down
Take time to think about what is going on in the viewfinder before pressing the shutter. How are you going to compose the shot? How are you going to light it? Don’t jump straight in without giving it some thought first. — Brad Marsellos

Shutter speed
Being aware of your shutter speed means the difference between taking a blurry photo and a sharp photo. It all depends on what you are after. If you are shooting a sporting event or children running around in the backyard, you probably want your subjects to be in focus. To capture fast action you will have to use a shutter speed over 1/500th of a second, if not 1/1000th to 1/2000th.

Keep it simple
Don’t try to pack too many elements into your image; it will just end up looking messy. If you just include one or two points of interest, your audience won’t be confused at where they should be looking or what they should be looking at. 


Be aware of backgrounds
What’s in your frame? So often I see great photos and think “didn’t they see that garbage bin, ugly wall, sign, etc?” It’s not just the person or object in your frame, it’s everything else in the background that can make or break a great photograph. So don’t be afraid to ask the person to move (or move yourself) to avoid something ugly in the background. — Marina Dot Perkins

Hold your camera properly
You might not know it, but there is a right way and a wrong way to hold a DSLR camera. The correct way is to support the lens by cupping your hand underneath it. This is usually done with the left hand, with your right hand gripping the body of the camera. This helps to prevent camera shake. If you are gripping your camera with your hands on either side of the camera body, there is nothing supporting the lens, and you might end up with blurry photos. To get an even stabler stance, tuck your elbows into the side of your body.

Inspiration from all forms
Take in as much photography as you can – online, and in books and magazines. But not passively. Look at different styles. Work out what you like or don’t like about them. Look at the technical elements of pictures and think about how they were made, and what the photographer is trying to say. The more you take in, the more arsenal you’ll have when creating your own work. — Leah Robertson

Be patient and persevere 

With time, patience, and perseverance, you will get better; with each and every photo you take.

Photo by Eugene Kim

March 18 2016

8 Photographers That Made Me Fall in Love With Photography

Over the years, I’ve been following a number of photographers who each have their own distinct style. What I mean by this is that when you see a photograph, you know it was taken by one of them. That’s one of the ultimate goals, isn’t it? To stand out from the crowd, to be unique, to have your own voice. Lately, I’ve taken a keen interest in wedding and family photography, mostly because I can connect with feelings associated with them – being a bride and a mom. Seeing brides and grooms on one of the happiest days of their lives makes my heart sing. (Sorry that was a little bit cheesy.) Being a mother I know how quickly babies can grow into kids so I’m excited when I get to capture their fleeting moments. I love seeing their countless expressions, from over-the-moon glee to uncontrollable sorrow.

The eight photographers in this post aren’t family or wedding photographers (except for Max Wanger). However, they’re photographers who’ve made a big impact on me by making me fall in with the whole genre of photography. While some are masters at creating whimsical scenes (Annie Leibovitz, Rodney Smith, Tim Walker) others are incredible at capturing the perfect moment (Henri Cartier-Bresson and Elliot Erwitt). Below one of their photographs, I’ve added in some quotes by them. If anything, I hope you come away with this post inspired.

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Henri Cartier-Bresson
He was one of the most accomplished and influential photographers of the 20th century; he was the acknowledged ‘master of the moment’, and many of his images are masterpieces of photographic history.

“To photograph: it is to put on the same line of sight the head, the eye and the heart.”
“Your first 10,000 photographs are your worst.”
“To me, photography is the simultaneous recognition, in a fraction of a second, of the significance of an event.”
“Your eye must see a composition or an expression that life itself offers you, and you must know with intuition when to click the camera.”
“We must avoid however, snapping away, shooting quickly and without thought, overloading ourselves with unnecessary images that clutter our memory and diminish the clarity of the whole.”
“You just have to live and life will give you pictures.”
“Of course it’s all luck.”

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Tim Walker
He is a British fashion photographer, who regularly shoots for Vogue and W Magazine. He’s known for his whimsical sets. Think Annie Leibovitz in male form.

“Only photograph what you love.”
“It is very difficult to make the ideas in my head come to life, but what is harder is making them look effortless.”
“Storytelling – fanciful storytelling – can only be told through fashion photography. It’s the perfect way to play with fantasy and dreams.”
“Looking back at my earlier pictures, I think that the work is very much coming from the same place. I have gone through a period of challenging myself with a complicated idea to currently challenging myself with the idea of simplicity.”

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Annie Leibovitz
Annie Leibovitz is an American portrait photographer known for her elaborate sets.

“A thing that you see in my pictures is that I was not afraid to fall in love with these people.”
“The camera makes you forget you’re there. It’s not like you are hiding but you forget, you are just looking so much.”
“If I didn’t have my camera to remind me constantly, I am here to do this, I would eventually have slipped away, I think. I would have forgotten my reason to exist.”

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Rodney Smith
With an illustrious career spanning over 45 years, New York-based photographer Rodney Smith has produced countless images that are a perfect blend of style and sophistication. The man is a genius at composition.

“People use the terminology ‘He’s a commercial photographer, he’s a fine art photographer, he’s a landscape photographer.’ I think it’s hard enough just to be a photographer. I think that in using the term ‘photographer’ one should be very careful about what that really means. I grew up in a tradition where being a photographer was a very noble pursuit. You pursued it for the love and the passion, and doing it was a very difficult thing to do. There are thousands and thousands of people who take photographs, but very few photographers, because one has to have an eye, one has to have the vision, one has to have something to say.”
“Many people believe that one is born with talent and some people have it and some people don’t. I actually don’t believe that. I believe that everyone has the ability; because everyone is a human being and everyone has feelings. If they are able to express those feelings, than that is part of their talent.”

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Steve McCurry
Steve McCurry, recognized universally as one of today’s finest photographers, is best known for his evocative color photography.

“Most of my photos are grounded in people, I look for the unguarded moment, the essential soul peeking out, experience etched on a person’s face.”
“My life is shaped by the urgent need to wander and observe, and my camera is my passport.”
“The photograph is an undeniably powerful medium. Free from the constraints of language, and harnessing the unique qualities of a single moment frozen in time.”

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Martin Schoeller
As a staff photographer at The New Yorker for more than a decade, Martin Schoeller captured a wide range of famous characters, from President Barack Obama and Lady Gaga to the skateboarder Tony Hawk.

“Don’t think you have a Vanity Fair cover and you’re done; you’re only as good as your last photograph.”
“I think the best way to describe it is a certain moment of intimacy, of vulnerability, that I’m striving to capture.”

Elliott-Erwitt

Elliott Erwitt
Elliott Erwitt is an advertising and documentary photographer known for his black and white candid shots of ironic and absurd situations within everyday settings— a master of Henri Cartier-Bresson’s “decisive moment”.

“All the technique in the world doesn’t compensate for the inability to notice.”
“To me, photography is an art of observation. It’s about finding something interesting in an ordinary place… I’ve found it has little to do with the things you see and everything to do with the way you see them.”
“I appreciate simplicity, true beauty that lasts over time, and a little wit and eclecticism that make life more fun.”

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Max Wanger
Max Wanger is a Los Angeles-based photography known for his simplicity and use of negative space.

“What makes photography interesting is that almost all photographers are unique. It’s very rare that two people are able to share the same moment from the same perspective. I guess that means my pictures are unique simply because I am who I am wherever I happen to be. Eyes (and shutter) open, of course.”
“Love what you photograph. if you love what you shoot, it comes across in your images. Also, scour books and magazines. And study composition.”

March 10 2016

Family Then and Now Photos by Tara Whitney

I was looking for some inspiration on family photography when I came across Tara Whitney’s Then and Now series. With her repeat clients, the photographer takes pictures of a mother pregnant or a couple with their young children and then fasts forwards us to when the baby is born or when the children are older. Love seeing the progression of time.

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2009 – Then

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2013 – Now

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2009 – Then

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2011 – Now

It’s nice to see that though the couples may have aged, their free spirits stay the same.

March 8 2016

Rainbow Babies: Miracle Newborn Babies Who Come After a Tragic Loss

Luisa Dunn is a Brisbane, Australia-based photographer who’s behind the photo series Rainbow Babies. Created for families that have suffered a loss due to miscarriage, stillbirth or premature birth, Dunn takes sweet photos of the couple’s next child, the miracle that appears after the tragedy.

As she describes on her website:

“A Rainbow baby is the understanding that the beauty of a rainbow does not negate the ravage of the storm. When a rainbow appears it does not mean the storm never happened or that the family is not still dealing with it’s aftermath. What it means is that something beautiful and full of light has appeared in the midst of the darkness and clouds.”

Dunn hopes that the Rainbow Baby sessions help initiate discussion of the sensitive but important topic of infant loss. She offers one free gift session per month to a selected family. In the photos you’ll see, beautifully delicate newborn babies lay peacefully while wrapped in or surrounded by a rainbow of colored cloth.

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Thanks for the tip, Kirra and Serenah!

Lisa Dunn’s website

March 7 2016

Baby, Don’t Cry: An Honest Photo Series of the Other Side of Parenthood

In addition to “Appa“, I’ve been working on another photo series that chronicles the life of my family. This time, I shined the spotlight on my two boys, Parker and Logan, but these aren’t the typical photos you’ll find on Facebook. Rather, I wanted to show the realities of parenthood, the other side if you will.

Here’s what I mean:

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As parents we’re eager to share photos of our happy, smiling babies on Instagram or Facebook. But what’s the other side of parenthood like? For my husband and I, a large part of our time is spent consoling our children or reprimanding them. There’s that time Logan had a throat infection that was so bad, he screamed and cried when he had to take a sip of water and swallow a piece of food. Or when Logan wailed at the top of his lungs and bit and scratched Sam for a full 30 minutes while on the Wild Animal Park tram ride because he hated being in a confined space. (Sam still has the scars.) Or how can I forget the time Parker threw a toy truck at his brother and left him sobbing with a huge scar ripped across his face?

The meltdowns, the sicknesses, the time-outs, they’re the side of parenthood we just don’t talk about. These are the moments that take me to levels of frustration or sadness that I never knew existed. Just looking at these pictures reminds me of just how complicated parenthood is, how the love you have for your children is so deep that watching them cry in pain makes you wish you could trade places with them. These pictures also remind me of what a huge responsibility we have as parents, to raise our children with a sense of right and wrong, even when scolding them may cause them to break down and cry.

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February 29 2016

Inspiration: Hideaki Hamada’s Heartwarming Photos of His Two Sons

Lately, I’ve been daydreaming about the type of photographer I’d like to be and I even went so far as to look over all of my photos to find some common themes. Then, I thought back to the photographers I’d written about on My Modern Met, the ones that stood out to me so much that they compelled me to share their images with the world. One of the photographers that came to mind was Japan-based Hideaki Hamada, who takes a mix between heartwarming and classic photos of his two sons, Haru and Mina. (Here’s my post about them from back in 2011.) Using only natural light, he captures fleeting moments that harken back to childhood. Not only do you get a feeling that you’re getting to know his two sweet sons, you’re taken back to your own childhood and the carefree feelings that come with it.

Here’s what Hamada told Rangfinder when he was asked how he captures such candid moments:

“When I look at my children, I have a strange feeling, as if I am watching myself reliving my life. What I want to show is their ‘living form.’ Children always act more than I expect, and the inspiration for my photography comes from this sort of behavior. When I take photos of my children, the important thing is to maintain an objective perspective; not too close, but also not too far away, as if I am watching them from behind—something close to mere observation, I think. This gives the photos a universal quality, and I believe this is necessary to communicate their living forms to someone else.”

I especially like this part: “not too close, but also not too far away, as if I am watching them from behind—something close to mere observation.”

Now that my own two sons are getting older (Parker is four and Logan is two), I’d like to start taking photos of their childhood in this vein. Of course, I wouldn’t copy Hamada’s style, rather, I’d take inspiration from it. I love how he captures his sons staring off into the distance, taking in the moment. Or the startled look on one of his son’s face as they peek out of a gate. I love the simple backgrounds, the different angles.

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February 26 2016

Sweet Mother Fox and Her Kit Show Undeniable Love

My day just got better. I’ve followed Roeselien Raimond for awhile, the way she captures the carefree spirit of red foxes is unlike any other wildlife photographer. My Modern Met conducted an interview with Raimond in September last year about her Zen Foxes series. I just checked out her 500px and her Fine Art America page and noticed that she’s captured her favorite subject kissing each other. Many of the pictures are titled “Foxy Love Series” and show a mom with her kit, showing affection and love. How does your heart not warm up when you see photos like this?

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February 25 2016

Superimposed Photos Show African Wildlife With Their Ravaged Habitats

Photographer Nick Brandt just came out with a powerful new photo series that captures the rapidly vanishing natural world of East Africa. Having taken photos of wildlife for ten years, he came back to the very same spots where the animals once inhabited to show how urban sprawl has taken over. Just three years ago, these places were filled with animals, who were free to roam at their own will. Now, factories and garbage dumps stand where animals like elephants, lions and rhinos once lived.

To create these photos, Brandt carefully matched up the composition of the original photo with the contours of the land. You can see how each animal blends into the background but now, how all around them, stands a virtual wasteland.

Animals in Africa desperately need people like Brandt “to visually document their plight for survival, share their stories and hopefully inspire policy change that will help save them from extinction,” said Alexandra Garcia, executive director of International League of Conservation Photographers in Washington, D.C.

The series, called Inherit the Dust, will be on exhibition at Fahey/Klein Gallery in Los Angeles starting March 24.

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More photos can be found at Fahey/Klein Gallery. You can read more about this series at the Los Angeles Times.

February 24 2016

Amazing Shortlisted Entries for Sony World Photography Awards 2016

Outside of the National Geographic photo competitions, the Sony World Photography Awards is the best at bringing to the forefront the world’s most talented photographers. Did you know that it’s the world’s largest photography competition? It receives an astounding number of entries, this year it was a record-breaking 230,103 from 186 countries, that’s up 33% from last year. Since its launch in 2007, they’ve surpassed 1 million entries, which makes them one of the most influential photography competitions in the world.

The shortlisted images have just been announced, and boy, are the photos spectacular. I sorted through all of their main categories – Professional, Open and Youth, and brought together 30 of my favorites. Though there was a “Highlights” package I could have just presented, instead I wanted to look at each shortlisted photo to find the most spellbinding, the ones that give us a new way to look at life. From a mother cheetah protecting her cubs to a father cleansing his son’s skin, enjoy these beautiful moments of the world around us.

The overall winner of the awards will be announced on April 21, 2016. Can’t wait!

Above: Image Name: Protection
Her name is Malaika. She is well known in Masai Mara reservation (Kenya). Her behavior towards her cubs is a great example of perfect motherhood. She spends the whole day trying to keep her cubs safe. After a lioness killed one of her cubs, she is left with five cubs.
Series of wildlife images taken in Masai Mara reserve in Africa
Copyright: © Mohammed Yousef, Kuwait, Shortlist, Professional Environment, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Professional Competition

Dora Maar (Henriette Theodora Markovic) was an independent and anti-conformist woman and photographer. She met Picasso in 1936. The painter kept her away from photography and pushed her into painting (a field in which he was the unquestioned king). Living in the shadow of the greatest artist of the time, Maar suffered from self-doubt and depression throughout her nine-year liaison with Picasso. The painter defined her as the most intelligent of all of his women and the one that made him laugh the most. else. Despite this, he always pictured her as the crying woman. Maar found herself abandoned by Picasso, and for this reason suffered of a nervous breakdown; she subsequently undertook electroshock therapy for three weeks in a psychiatric hospital. She said “after Picasso there is only God”. 

Series Name: Picasso’s Women
Series Description: The project consists of seven photographic shots, each representing one of the women who influenced the sentimental life and artistic work of Pablo Picasso: Eva Gouel, Gaby Depeyre, Olga KhaKhlova, Marie-Therese Walter, Dora Maar, Francoise Gilot and Jacqueline Rocque. The project was conceived from the need to tell the story and give a face to the women who always lived under Picasso’s wings and influenced the work of the most known artist of the twentieth century.
Image Description: Dora Maar (Henriette Theodora Markovic) was an independent and anti-conformist woman and photographer. She met Picasso in 1936. The painter kept her away from photography and pushed her into painting (a field in which he was the unquestioned king). Living in the shadow of the greatest artist of the time, Maar suffered from self-doubt and depression throughout her nine-year liaison with Picasso. The painter defined her as the most intelligent of all of his women and the one that made him laugh the most. else. Despite this, he always pictured her as the crying woman. Maar found herself abandoned by Picasso, and for this reason suffered of a nervous breakdown; she subsequently undertook electroshock therapy for three weeks in a psychiatric hospital. She said “after Picasso there is only God”.
Copyright: © Cristina Vatielli, Italy, Shortlist, Professional, Staged, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards 

The Pools series is a study of water, one of the most precious resources for life on our planet. The artistic approach of photographer Stephan Zirwes is to show how the important resource is in contrast between being the consummate location for entertainment and the incredible waste of drinking water “not only for being used in private pools but also the trend to privatise what is a public asset and use it for commercial reasons. Public pools can still be a symbol for the importance that water should be free accessible to everyone. The clean formal language and the simple design of the pictures focus our interest on this newsworthy issue with elegance and almost playful. A deep dive into the blue as Zirwes copied parts of the original pool tiles and enlarged them in a simple, visible way to create a kind of mount in patterns.

Series Name: Pools
The Pools series is a study of water, one of the most precious resources for life on our planet. The artistic approach of photographer Stephan Zirwes is to show how the important resource is in contrast between being the consummate location for entertainment and the incredible waste of drinking water “not only for being used in private pools but also the trend to privatise what is a public asset and use it for commercial reasons. Public pools can still be a symbol for the importance that water should be free accessible to everyone. The clean formal language and the simple design of the pictures focus our interest on this newsworthy issue with elegance and almost playful. A deep dive into the blue as Zirwes copied parts of the original pool tiles and enlarged them in a simple, visible way to create a kind of mount in patterns.
Copyright: © Stephan Zirwes, Germany, Shortlist, Professional , Architecture, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

A feral child is one which has lived isolated from human contact, often from a very young age. As a result the child grows up with little or no experience of human care, behaviour or language. Some were cruelly confined or abandoned by their own parents, rejected perhaps because of their intellectual or physical impairment, or the parent's belief that this was the case. In other instances the loss of both parents was the cause. Others ran away after experiencing abuse. Yet more ended up in the wild and were "adopted" by animals as a result of a wide variety of circumstances  getting lost, being taken by wild animals, etc. Documented cases of feral children are geographically spread over four continents, and vary in age from babies taken by wild animals up to eight year olds. Of course, these cases are only known of because the child survived. It is not difficult to think that there are probably untold cases where the outcome was less favourable.As a mother of two young boys I was appalled and intrigued in turn when I first learned about feral children. My initial reaction was to think how parents could either neglect or lose their child. My maternal instinct goes into overdrive when I consider these young people experiencing their lives alone or in the company of wild animals. Then I consider and admire the fortitude they must have shown to survive such isolation and extreme circumstances. In any of the circumstances that I have read about, it completely overwhelms the boundaries of my comprehension. However, I have risen to the challenge of trying to capture my thoughts photographically about the isolation under which these youngsters found themselves, wondering at the same time if those living in the companionship of wild animals were perhaps better off than those whose young lives were spent with no companionship at all. I chose 15 cases to portray, these range from a girl who as a toddler was confined by her parents to a potty chair for ten years to that of a baby boy who was stolen by a leopardess and found three years later in the company of her and her latest cubs. My idea was not to replicate the exact scenes, but to interpret and duplicate the feelings and actions of each feral child living their experience. Some spent most of their time indoors, even in close proximity to or inside human habitation. Yet others spent the duration of their feral life outside, exposed to the elements, depending on their own ability and that of their wild companions for shelter and food and water, not to mention constantly having to avoid danger and health problems. Life is complex, for some more than others, even when we are considering a normal human life. Its complexity varies from one part of the globe to the other. In considering feral children, who are fully human, at least at the start of their lives, how can we not look at my images and question and wonder about the tenacious survival instincts of these 15 human beings.

Series Name: Feral Children, 2015
A feral child is one which has lived isolated from human contact, often from a very young age. As a result the child grows up with little or no experience of human care, behaviour or language. Some were cruelly confined or abandoned by their own parents, rejected perhaps because of their intellectual or physical impairment, or the parent’s belief that this was the case. In other instances the loss of both parents was the cause. Others ran away after experiencing abuse. Yet more ended up in the wild and were “adopted” by animals as a result of a wide variety of circumstances getting lost, being taken by wild animals, etc. Documented cases of feral children are geographically spread over four continents, and vary in age from babies taken by wild animals up to eight year olds. Of course, these cases are only known of because the child survived. It is not difficult to think that there are probably untold cases where the outcome was less favourable.As a mother of two young boys I was appalled and intrigued in turn when I first learned about feral children. My initial reaction was to think how parents could either neglect or lose their child. My maternal instinct goes into overdrive when I consider these young people experiencing their lives alone or in the company of wild animals. Then I consider and admire the fortitude they must have shown to survive such isolation and extreme circumstances. In any of the circumstances that I have read about, it completely overwhelms the boundaries of my comprehension. However, I have risen to the challenge of trying to capture my thoughts photographically about the isolation under which these youngsters found themselves, wondering at the same time if those living in the companionship of wild animals were perhaps better off than those whose young lives were spent with no companionship at all. I chose 15 cases to portray, these range from a girl who as a toddler was confined by her parents to a potty chair for ten years to that of a baby boy who was stolen by a leopardess and found three years later in the company of her and her latest cubs. My idea was not to replicate the exact scenes, but to interpret and duplicate the feelings and actions of each feral child living their experience. Some spent most of their time indoors, even in close proximity to or inside human habitation. Yet others spent the duration of their feral life outside, exposed to the elements, depending on their own ability and that of their wild companions for shelter and food and water, not to mention constantly having to avoid danger and health problems. Life is complex, for some more than others, even when we are considering a normal human life. Its complexity varies from one part of the globe to the other. In considering feral children, who are fully human, at least at the start of their lives, how can we not look at my images and question and wonder about the tenacious survival instincts of these 15 human beings.
Copyright: © Julia Fullerton-Batten, United Kingdom, Shortlist, Professional, Staged, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Calved ice from a glacier at Scoresby Sund fjord, east coast of Greenland.

Series Name: Dead End – Oil Exploration in the Arctic
Series Description: Climate change is taking its toll on the Planet and its inhabitants. Nowhere else, is this more visible than in the Arctic. On our warming globe, the Arctic experiences temperature rise twice as high than elsewhere. Over the last few decades, Arctic sea ice has experienced a dramatic decline. Its a bitter irony that a rapidly changing Arctic is not seen as a stark warning to our way of life, but instead exploited by governments and oil companies to further drill for the very same oil that caused the melting in the first place. Despite rapid and profound changes, the Arctic is very much still an incredible inhospitable place to drill for oil.
Image Description: Calved ice from a glacier at Scoresby Sund fjord, east coast of Greenland.
Copyright: © Christian Aslund, Sweden, Shortlist, Professional, Campaign, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

In the migratory season, there's still some people to catch the migratory birds by erecting the net in order to get a large profits although the government have prohibited to do that. Thousands of migratory birds are killed each year, and the ecological balance is destroyed deeply. Day by day, the ultimate victims will be the man himself. I wish these photos can play a role for the protection of migratory birds.

Series Name: The Death of Migratory Birds
In the migratory season, there’s still some people to catch the migratory birds by erecting the net in order to get a large profits although the government have prohibited to do that. Thousands of migratory birds are killed each year, and the ecological balance is destroyed deeply. Day by day, the ultimate victims will be the man himself. I wish these photos can play a role for the protection of migratory birds.
Copyright: © Yong An He, China, Shortlist, Professional, Contemporary Issues, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

There are more than 300 people that with the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey circus blue unit, representing 25 different countries and speaking everything from Russian to Arabic to Guarani. A few travel in cars and trailers, but a majority, 270, live on the trains. Most come from multigeneration circus families, to the extent that collectively, the circus staff represents thousands of years of circus history. The men and women all say that only circus people like them can understand the lifestyle. They spend 44 weeks of the year traveling an average of 20,000 miles from coast to coast on a train that is 61 cars ”a full mile” long. It is a life of close quarters and rigorous training, a life that many of the performers began in childhood. Their job is to convince the world that the circus still matters.

Series Name: Running Away with the Circus
Series Description: There are more than 300 people that with the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey circus blue unit, representing 25 different countries and speaking everything from Russian to Arabic to Guarani. A few travel in cars and trailers, but a majority, 270, live on the trains. Most come from multigeneration circus families, to the extent that collectively, the circus staff represents thousands of years of circus history. The men and women all say that only circus people like them can understand the lifestyle. They spend 44 weeks of the year traveling an average of 20,000 miles from coast to coast on a train that is 61 cars ”a full mile” long. It is a life of close quarters and rigorous training, a life that many of the performers began in childhood. Their job is to convince the world that the circus still matters.
Copyright: © Stephanie Sinclair, US, Shortlist, Professional Daily Life, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards / National Geographic Creative

On the Philosopher As an expression of absurdity in an absurd world, eruption of freedom in skimpy landscapes, anarchic dancing in a shabby architecture, the pictures of "The Philosopher" are the result of improvised events, born out of the search "at the whim of improvised journeys“ of places favorable to disruption, to reinvention. The settings are those of the institutional planning. Confined in their useful role, they become inhuman when pushed by. The pictures are Epectase brings back the body to it, fitted with a bizarre sensuality, both Old France style and futuristic. Between dada poetry and punk controversy, the body that is staged here wants to wake up life. Absurdity in an absurd world, eruption of freedom in skimpy landscapes, anarchic dancing in a shabby architecture, the clichè of the philosopher are the result of improvised events, born of research at the discretion of improvised trips the two artists.

Series Name: The Philosopher
On the Philosopher As an expression of absurdity in an absurd world, eruption of freedom in skimpy landscapes, anarchic dancing in a shabby architecture, the pictures of “The Philosopher” are the result of improvised events, born out of the search “at the whim of improvised journeys“ of places favorable to disruption, to reinvention. The settings are those of the institutional planning. Confined in their useful role, they become inhuman when pushed by. The pictures are Epectase brings back the body to it, fitted with a bizarre sensuality, both Old France style and futuristic. Between dada poetry and punk controversy, the body that is staged here wants to wake up life. Absurdity in an absurd world, eruption of freedom in skimpy landscapes, anarchic dancing in a shabby architecture, the clichè of the philosopher are the result of improvised events, born of research at the discretion of improvised trips the two artists.
Copyright: © Juliette Blanchard, France, Shortlist, Professional, Staged, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

A country named after a desert. One of the least densely populated places on earth. Defined by its rich variety of colors yet in a forever changing, yet completely barren landscape. Namibia's landscape draws you in, through a vast brown plain of scorched earth, and steers you over the white surface of a salt pan to finally arrive in the gold tones of the sand dunes. Patience is required to discover the wide range of Namibia's subtle scenery. It literally takes you hours, driving though nothing, to at long last arrive at...more of nothing. The sight of other people is rare and only the strategically located gas stations are a reminder of the world beyond. This country is in another time zone—time seems to move slower but it feels more logical, somehow. Captivated by these washed out yet delicately colored landscapes, you can drive for hours. Chaperoned by herds of giraffes or zebras, shadowed by flocks of flamingos, suddenly stumbling upon a family of elephants. The animals look up curiously, but soon forget about you and slowly continue their journey, unhurried by your presence, at their own pace. - Maroesjka Lavigne

Series Name: Land of Nothingness
A country named after a desert. One of the least densely populated places on earth. Defined by its rich variety of colors yet in a forever changing, yet completely barren landscape. Namibia’s landscape draws you in, through a vast brown plain of scorched earth, and steers you over the white surface of a salt pan to finally arrive in the gold tones of the sand dunes. Patience is required to discover the wide range of Namibia’s subtle scenery. It literally takes you hours, driving though nothing, to at long last arrive at…more of nothing. The sight of other people is rare and only the strategically located gas stations are a reminder of the world beyond. This country is in another time zone—time seems to move slower but it feels more logical, somehow. Captivated by these washed out yet delicately colored landscapes, you can drive for hours. Chaperoned by herds of giraffes or zebras, shadowed by flocks of flamingos, suddenly stumbling upon a family of elephants. The animals look up curiously, but soon forget about you and slowly continue their journey, unhurried by your presence, at their own pace.
Copyright: © Maroesjka Lavigne, Belgium, Shortlist, Professional Landscape, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

This series represent exploration of the most extreme and far cold-water seas, washing the coasts of Russia, because only few people in the world had chance to dive there. These seas are true pearls of nature, hiding mysteries and treasures not only for divers and scientists - there is another universe with it's own aliens and fantastic creatures. These strange animals are mostly undescribed. Some of them are tiny, some are hidden because of their complete transparency, some are beautiful and gentle giants - in the underwater world you can find living things for the first time in the history of humanity, but they were there for millions of years. Modern diving and photo equipment give us a chance to reveal this beauty hidden in the dark.

Series Name: Real World Aliens
This series represent exploration of the most extreme and far cold-water seas, washing the coasts of Russia, because only few people in the world had chance to dive there. These seas are true pearls of nature, hiding mysteries and treasures not only for divers and scientists – there is another universe with it’s own aliens and fantastic creatures. These strange animals are mostly undescribed. Some of them are tiny, some are hidden because of their complete transparency, some are beautiful and gentle giants – in the underwater world you can find living things for the first time in the history of humanity, but they were there for millions of years. Modern diving and photo equipment give us a chance to reveal this beauty hidden in the dark.
Copyright: © Alexander Semenov, Russia, Shortlist, Professional Environment, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

on January 30, 2015 in Xinjiang, China.  The Eagle Hunting festival, organised by the local hunting community, is part of an effort to promote and grow traditional hunting practices for new generations in the mountainous region of western China that borders Kazakhstan, Russia and Mongolia. The training and handling of the large birds of prey follows a strict set of ancient rules that Kazakh eagle hunters are preserving for future generations.

Series Name: Eagle Hunters of Western China
On January 30, 2015 in Xinjiang, China.
The Eagle Hunting festival, organized by the local hunting community, is part of an effort to promote and grow traditional hunting practices for new generations in the mountainous region of western China that borders Kazakhstan, Russia and Mongolia. The training and handling of the large birds of prey follows a strict set of ancient rules that Kazakh eagle hunters are preserving for future generations.
Copyright: © Kevin Frayer, Canada, Shortlist, Professional Environment, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

These images were created for the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago's Adaptive Sports Program and the RIC Hornets wheelchair basketball team.

Series Name: RIC Hornets
These images were created for the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago’s Adaptive Sports Program and the RIC Hornets wheelchair basketball team.
Copyright: © Rob Gregory, United States, Shortlist, Professional , Campaign, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Series of wildlife images taken in Masai Mara reserve in Africa

Series Name: Art in the Wild
Series Description: Series of Wildlife Images Taken in Masai Mara Reserve in Africa
Image Name: Respect the Tusk
Image Description: The love story between the lion and the lioness in Masai Mara is fascinating. Anger in this case is translated as romance and care.
Copyright: © Mohammed Yousef, Kuwait, Shortlist, Professional Environment, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Open Competition

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Image Description: Polar Bear Enjoying His Bath
Copyright: © Michaela ämÌdov·, Czech Republic, Shortlist, Open Nature and Wildlife, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

open air

Image Name: Open Air
Image Description: People on mass yoga exercise in the central park of Vilnius.
Copyright: © Karolis Janulis, Lithuania, Shortlist, Open People, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

The waves of Sawarna

Image Name: The Waves of Sawarna
Copyright: © Dikky Oesin, Indonesia, Shortlist, Open Panoramic, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Bering sea. Commander islands. Baby fur seal

Image Name: Sea Baby
Image Description: Bering sea. Commander islands
Baby fur seal
Copyright: Andrey Narchuk, Russia, Shortlist, Open, Nature and Wildlife, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Four centimeters of mightyness that moves slowly and unrelentless on a tree, while the moon rises on the background. The rhinoceros beetle is a nocturnal insect, during the day they stay safe under the cortex of the trees and with the summer they become very active flying at dusk to find a mate.

Image Name: Blue Moon
Image Description: Four centimeters of mightyness that moves slowly and unrelentless on a tree, while the moon rises on the background. The rhinoceros beetle is a nocturnal insect, during the day they stay safe under the cortex of the trees and with the summer they become very active flying at dusk to find a mate.
Copyright: © Simona Tedesco, Italy, Shortlist, Open, Nature and Wildlife, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

People swim at the sea in Havana, April 28, 2015. On Sunday, Cuba registered a temperature of 39.7 degrees Celsius, 0.1 degrees less than the island's historic record, according to Jose Rubiera, Director of the National Forecast Center of the Institute of Meteorology of Cuba.

Image Name: Cuba Beach/Reuters
Image Description: People swim at the sea in Havana, April 28, 2015. On Sunday, Cuba registered a temperature of 39.7 degrees Celsius, 0.1 degrees less than the island’s historic record, according to Jose Rubiera, Director of the National Forecast Center of the Institute of Meteorology of Cuba.Copyright: � Alexandre Meneghini, Brazil, Shortlist, Open, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Icelandic Horses

Image Name: Icelandic Horses
Copyright: © Nick Kontostavlakis, Greece, Shortlist, Open Nature and Wildlife, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

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Image Name: Dancing with Stars
Image Description: The mass swarming of Danube mayfly (Ephoron virgo) in R√°ba and Danube rivers is one of the most exciting phenomenon for me.
Copyright: © Imre PotyÛ, Hungary, Shortlist, Open Nature and Wildlife, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Every year in the month of January few lacks of devotee come to Gangasagar fair in West Bengal. It is the 2nd largest fair of India. Captured the devotees while they worship sun just after their bath.

Image Name: Gangasagar Fair
Image Description: Every year in the month of January few lacks of devotee come to Gangasagar fair in West Bengal. It is the 2nd largest fair of India. Captured the devotees while they worship sun just after their bath.
Copyright: © Abhijit Banerjee, India, Shortlist, Open Competition, Travel, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

The door to hell

Image Name: The Stairway to Hell
Image Description: Heaven meets hell as the milky way ascends over the Darvaza gas crater in the Karakom desert, Turkministan. Taken at the Darvaza gas crater in the Karakom desert, Turkmenistan.
Copyright: © Tino Solomon, UK, Shortlist, Open Low Light, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

A boy creatively made a LOVE shape at the River of Tukad Yeh Unda in Klungkung Sub-District, Klungkung Regency, Bali, Indonesia.

Image Name: Creation of Love
Image Description: A boy creatively made a LOVE shape at the River of Tukad Yeh Unda in Klungkung Sub-District, Klungkung Regency, Bali, Indonesia.
Copyright: © Cheung Yin Fang, Malaysia, Shortlist, Open Competition, Split Second, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Reindeer farmer kids in Mongolia

Image Name: Reindeer Farmer Kids
Image Description: Reindeer farmer kids in Mongolia.
Copyright: © Peter Voss, Germany, Shortlist, Open Competition, Smile, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Annually on holidays vu lan - signaling parents. People want them to pray for his parents. They were released on river use candles temple.

Image Name: Lighting Dream
Image Description: Annually on holidays Vu Lan – signaling parents. people want them to pray for his parents. They were released on river use candles temple.
Copyright: © Minh Ngo Thanh, Vietnam, Shortlist, Open Arts and Culture, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

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Image Description: This is the Impression Lijiang, it is a cultural theatrical show that describes the lifestyle and several interesting traditions of the Naxi, Yi and Bai people in a colourful and flamboyant outdoor production.The show is innovatively staged in the morning and afternoon. Lijiang city, China
Copyright: © Nader Saadallah, Egypt,, Shortlist, Open Arts and Culture, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

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Image Name: Dream – The Little Dancer
Copyright: © Mickael Szymanski, France, Shortlist, Open Enhanced, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

A fisherman is farming the sea in between the bamboo rods constructed for aquaculture off the coast in southern China.

Image Name: Farming the Sea
Image Description: A fisherman is farming the sea in between the bamboo rods constructed for aquaculture off the coast in southern China.
Copyright: © Tugo Cheng, Hong Kong, Shortlisted, Open Competition, Travel, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

Youth Competition

The oroomiyeh lake has always been a place where people cleanse. cleanse their skin from the penetrating rays of the sun and cleanse their minds and render it like the landscape itself; white, blank, with an indistinguishable horizon.

Image Name: Salt Cleansing
Image Description: The Oroomiyeh lake has always been a place where people cleanse. Cleanse their skin from the penetrating rays of the sun and cleanse their minds and render it like the landscape itself; white, blank, with an indistinguishable horizon.
Copyright: © Sepehr Jamshidi Fard, Iran, Shortlist, Youth Culture, 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

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