The World Photography Awards was created by the World Photography Organisation and is sponsored by Sony. It launched in 2007. Last Year, the 2010 L’Iris d’Or was awarded to Italian photographer Tommaso Ausili. The competition attracted over 80,000 entrants from 148 countries.
The World Photography Festival will go to Shanghai (October), San Francisco (November), São Paulo (March) and London (April).
You can view an online gallery on the World Photography Organisation website – www.worldphoto.org.
The Sony World Photography Awards competition is free to enter and all images submitted must have been shot in 2010. Photographers may enter either the Professional or Open competition; it is not possible to enter both.
The competition will close for entries on Wednesday 5 January 2011 at 23.59 GMT.
A separate Student Focus programme and competition is open to students aged 18-28.
Full details can be found at www.worldphoto.org.
Press Release
20 October 2010
Sony World Photography Awards 2011 Judges Announced
The World Photography Organisation (WPO) today – 20 October 2010 – announces this year’s juries of the Sony World Photography Awards. The announcement comes just three months ahead of the closing date for the 2011 Awards (5 January 2011).
The Sony World Photography Awards is the most comprehensive photography prize in the world with the broadest range of categories open to photographers of every level.
There are three juries selected to judge the three awards programmes of the Sony World Photography Awards. One to judge the Professional categories, a second for the Open categories and a third for the Student Focus competition.
The Honorary Judging Committee, which judges the Professional awards categories, consists of a panel of influential photography professionals from around the world. Chaired by Francis Hodgson who is the photo critic of the Financial Times, the Honorary Jury 2011 includes esteemed names ranging from the Photography Editor of British Vogue, to the Visuals Editor of New Yorker Magazine, to curators and academics from some of the world’s leading photography institutions. All jury members are selected from the World Photographic Academy, part of the WPO.
These 12 members will judge all 15 categories of the Professional awards according to their expertise. Following the category selections, the judges come together to select the one overall winner from all 15 category winners, the L’Iris d’Or / Sony World Photography Awards Professional Photographer of the Year.
The Official Open Selection Committee, will judge the 10 Amateur categories. Image inspectors from iStockphoto, the world’s largest stock imagery agency, will narrow the thousands of amateur entries down to the top 50 in each category. The iStockphoto image inspectors are then joined by two photographic experts from Sony and the Chair of the Honorary Judging Committee, to make the final selection and choose the overall Sony World Photography Awards Amateur Photographer of the Year.
A third jury for the Student Focus competition (formerly announced in July 2010) is also selected from the Academy members including Roger Tooth, Head of Photography, The Guardian and Eder Chiodetto, Curator of Photography, Museum of Modern Art, São Paulo. The Student Focus Jury will view entries by university students who have answered the 2011 student brief of Exposed. The brief is based on an exhibition at the TATE Modern and is a direct result of a partnership between the WPO and Young Tate Online.
Astrid Merget, Creative Director, Sony World Photography Awards, comments: ‘We’re thrilled with our judging panels and feel truly grateful to have such leading professionals in the global photography community supporting the awards. I wish them luck with the judging as much as I wish the entrants luck, who will have the opportunity to be scrutinised by some of the most esteemed names in the industry.’
The 2011 WPA Honorary Jury – Professional Competition Categories
The Professional competition is for professionals and serious amateurs or enthusiasts. Within the Professional competition, three distinct sectors of photography are awarded. They are: Commercial; Fine Art, and Photojournalism & Documentary. Each genre is equally recognised by judges. Submissions must be based on a body of work and contain a minimum of three images and a maximum of 10. Both published and unpublished works may be considered.
Judging of the Commercial categories:
• Mike Trow (UK), Photo Editor, British Vogue
• RJ Muna (US), San Francisco-based photographer known for his commercial work
• Sasha Erwitt (US), Senior Associate Picture Editor of Vanity Fair
• Elizabeth Zeschin (UK), UK-based photographer known for her commercial and editorial work
In the Commercial categories judges will be looking for photography that has primarily been commissioned for commercial intent, the purpose of which is to sell products or services. The sub-categories are: Campaign; Travel; Lifestyle; Still Life; Fashion.
Judging of the Photojournalism and Documentary categories:
• Elizabeth Biondi (US), Visuals Editor, The New Yorker Magazine
• Pedro Meyer (Mexico), photographer and founder of ZoneZero
• Stephen Mayes, Managing Director, VII Photo Agency
• Rena Effendi (Azerbaijan), award winning social documentary photographer
In the Photojournalism & Documentary Category, judges will be looking for imagery that tells a story; from capturing current news or a global issue through to chronicling historical and worldwide events and popular culture. The sub-categories are: Current Affairs; Contemporary issues; People; Arts & Culture; Sport.
Judging of the Fine Art Categories:
• Caprice Horn (Germany), Director, Gallerie Caprice Horn
• Liu Heung Shing (Beijing), Author and Pulitzer Prize winning photographer
• Francis Hodgson (UK), Photo Critic, Financial Times
• Julia Fullerton-Batten (Germany/UK), an established photographer with a worldwide reputation
In the Fine Art Category, judges are looking for photographs that are created in accordance with the creative vision of the photographer as an artist. The sub-categories are: Current Affairs; Contemporary Issues; People; Arts & Culture; Sport.
The 2011 Open Competition Jury and Open Competition Categories
In the Open Category, which is open to everyone and is judged on a single image, the sub-categories are: Action; After Dark; Architecture; Arts & Culture; Fashion; Nature & Wildlife; Panoramic; People; Smile; Travel.
‘Over the past few years we’ve been blown away by the images the photographers in this category produce,’ said Joseph Jean Rolland Dube, vice president of content at iStockphoto. ‘Every image submitted speaks to the passion the competitors have for the art of photography as well as the subjects they choose to shoot. Even though we look at photos for a living, being part of this contest is something we genuinely look forward to all year.’
2011 WPA Student Focus Programme
The judges for Student Focus, a competition which involves photographic institutions from around the world are:
• Deborah Willis (US), active Chair and Professor of Photography and Imaging at Tisch School of the Arts, New York University
• Eder Chiodetto (Brazil), Curator of Photography, Museum of Modern Art, São Paulo
• Roger Tooth (UK), Head of Photography, The Guardian
• Simon Norfolk (UK), award winning photographer working from the south coast of England
• Shizuka Yokomizo (Japanese born, UK based), a photographer best known for her portrait series ‘Strangers’