On Thursday, during a ceremony in London, the World Photography Organization, Creo, and Sony announced the winners of the 17th Sony World Photography Award. This long-standing prize celebrates photography and shines as one of the most important global photography competition. Juliette Pavy is the Sony World Photographer of the Year. She conquered the jury of the 17th Sony World Photography Awards with a visual story about the forced contraceptive campaign imposed on Greenlandic women by Denmark in the sixties and seventies. The other works highlighted by the final selection of category prizes all deal with strong contemporary themes, such as the relationship between humanity and the environment and the different declination of diversity. In Sala Mayor (Living Room), the winner of the Architecture and Design category, Siobhán Doran (Ireland) documented the homes of families who acquired wealth in the sugar trade in the Philippines through a series of eerie and striking pictures of their sumptuous and post-colonial living rooms. The winner of the Creative category, Sujata Setia (United Kingdom), used her project A Thousand Cuts to examine the stories of survivors of domestic abuse from the UK’s South Asian community. The photographer employed a series of intricate incisions on the surface of the photographs, revealing a layer of red paper underneath to symbolize the pain and resilience of her subjects. With the series the Sacrifice Zone, one of the most visually striking series, Dutch photographer Eddo Hartmann explored a remote area of Kazakhstan which was the site of USSR’s major nuclear testing facilities. Hartmann used an infrared camera to turn into pink and red the green of the scenery, thus evoking the radiation contamination invisible to the human eye (opening picture). In our gallery above, we’ve collected all the pictures of the professional category winners, along with the winner of the Open selection. Every year, the SWPA competition also invites amateur photographers to send their shots to participate in the Open category. The absolute winner this year was Liam Man, with the impressive drone shot “Moonrise Sprites over Storr.” Last but not least, this year’s Outstanding Contribution to Photography Award went to Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado, celebrating an extraordinary career that spans more than five decades. “I am humbled by this award and extremely grateful for it,” said Salgado. “To the young photographers whose work we admired tonight, I say, keep on going! In fifty years from now, you will be the one on this stage, accepting the prize I was awarded tonight.” The picture of all the professional category winners, along with selected shots from the shortlisted finalist, the winner of the Sustainability Prize, and 40 selected photographs by Sebastião Salgado, will be on display at the Somerset House in London from April 19th to May 9th.
Take a look at Sony World Photography Awards 2024 winning images
The World Photography Organisation has announced the photographers who have won the coveted award. Juliette Pavy is the photographer of the year, and Sebastião Salgado won the lifetime achievement award.
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- Andrea Nepori
- 19 April 2024
Juliette Pavy (France) explored the lasting impact of the birth control campaign led by Danish authorities in Greenland between 1966 and 1975, during which thousands of young Greenlandic women were implanted with intrauterine devices without their consent, in many cases leading to their sterilisation.
@Juliette Pavy
Irish photographer Siobhán Doran documented the homes of families who acquired wealth in the sugar trade in the Philippines, through a series of portraits of their main living rooms.
©Siobhán Doran
©Sujata Setia
With "A Thousand Cuts", Creative category winner Sujata Setia examines the pain and resilience of survivors of domestic abuse from the UK’s South Asian community, through a series of intricately crafted portraits with incisions in the surface of the photographs, revealing a layer of red paper underneath.
©Sujata Setia
With his project "The Sacrifice Zone", Dutch photographer Eddo Hartmann explores a remote area of Kazakhstan that was once the site of the Soviet Union’s major nuclear testing facilities, using infrared to evoke the impact of the radiation contamination invisible to the human eye.
©Eddo Hartmann
©Eddo Hartmann
In "Father and Son", Bulgarian photographer Valery Poshtarov asked fathers and sons from Bulgaria, Georgia, Turkey, Armenia, Serbia, and Greece to hold hands. This small but important act of familial tenderness creates an intimate and moving portrait of masculinity and paternal relationships.
©Valery Poshtarov
©Valery Poshtarov
In Thomas Meurot’s Kald Sòl (Cold Sun), we follow a cold surfing expedition in Iceland, with the black and white format used to emphasise the freezing temperatures which persisted even in the glaring winter sun.
©Thomas Meurot
©Thomas Meurot
In Portraits and Landscapes, Argentinian photographer Jorge Mónaco invites the viewer to delve into the intimate stories of his subjects, offering a reflective perspective on human diversity.
©Jorge Mónaco
Federico Scarchilli’s series Flora highlights the vital role of plants in medicine, juxtaposing photographs of key species that have been instrumental in the development of modern medicine, with neat rows of pills laid out symmetrically. ©Federico Scarchilli
©Federico Scarchilli
Eva Berler’s "Suspended Worlds" invites the viewer to take a closer look into the world of spider webs, where time and action are frozen, capturing the artful, irregular intricacies of these ephemeral creations.
©Eva Berler
©Eva Berler
©Liam Man