2013 Sony World Photography Awards
2013 Sony World Photography
Awards
L’iris
D’or and Competition Winners
Revealed
• Professional category winners announced
• Hoang Hiep Nguyen, Vietnam, named Open Photographer of the Year
• William Eggleston receives Outstanding Contribution to Photography award
• Polish student wins Student Focus and Romanian photographer collects Youth Award
• Winners of KKF Book Awards for Best Photography and Moving Image Books revealed
AUCKLAND, 29 April 2013 - Thirty-two year-old Norwegian photographer Andrea Gjestvang was announced as the L’Iris d’Or/Sony World Photography Awards Photographer of the Year. Beating over 122,000 entries from 170 countries, the photographer collected her award plus Sony digital imaging equipment and $25,000 (USD) prize money at a gala ceremony held in London.
The judges voted unanimously for Gjestvang’s
powerful series of portraits of children and youths who
survived the July 2011 massacre on the island of Utoeya,
outside Oslo. Titled ‘One day in history’ the series
captures the young survivors with immense sensitivity and
honesty and are an enduring testament to the resolve of
these young people in the face of this unspeakable
tragedy.
Upon receiving her award Gjestvang
commented: “I feel so honoured, grateful and proud to
receive this fantastic recognition and prize. I am
grateful the important stories of these young people are
reaching out and moving people the way they move
me.”
Chair of the Honorary Jury, Catherine
Chermayeff, Director of Special Projects at Magnum Photos,
adds: “As the Jury Chairman I am delighted that Andrea
Gjestvang has won the L'Iris d'Or prize. The entire jury was
unanimous in selecting this body of work. "One Day in
History" is a quiet, thoughtful and ultimately powerful
voice for the children and survivors of the massacre in
Norway. We were all moved by the dignity and beauty of these
images.”
In just a few years, Andrea Gjestvang
has established herself as one of the world’s most
exciting young photographers. Her work has been published
in Newsweek, M Le Monde, Stern and D Republica, and
exhibited worldwide. In 2010 she participated in the Joop
Swart Masterclass, and in 2012 she was named one of PDN's 30
New and Emerging photographers to watch. Most recently she
was awarded the Photo of the Year prize at the 2012
Norwegian Picture of the Year competition for her portrait
of Utøya survivor Ylva Helen Schwenke. Gjestvang winning
series ‘One Day in History’ was published as a book in
Norway in 2012. She is represented by Moment Agency.
The L’Iris d’Or winning series of work, alongside those of the other winners announced tonight at the awards, will be displayed as part of the 2013 Sony World Photography Awards Exhibition at Somerset House from 26 April – 12 May. The images will also be published in the 2013 edition of the Sony World Photography Awards book, available to buy from worldphoto.org/2013book
Open Photographer of the Year - Hoang Hiep Nguyen, Vietnam
Also at the awards, a twenty-one year old amateur photographer from Hanoi, Vietnam, who incredibly only bought his first digital camera one year ago, was announced as the Open Photographer of the Year.
Hoang Hiep Nguyen was presented with a Sony 77 camera plus $5,000 (USD) for his winning image of a young girl in a storm. The photograph beat entries from around the world in a competition that sought to find the world’s single best image taken by an amateur photographer or photography enthusiast.
Presiding Chair of Judges for the Open competition, Damien Demolder, Editor of Amateur Photographer magazine in the UK, comments: “Nguyen's picture is the standout image of the Open competition with its intense romantic atmosphere and its sense of mystical fantasy. It is a delightful image that really sums up the amazing level of creativity and skill that today's amateur photographers are capable of, and a supremely worthy winner of this globally prestigious competition.”
Professional category winners and finalists
The winners plus the
2nd and 3rd placed photographers of the Professional
competition were also revealed at the awards ceremony. All
15 Professional winners – from Australia to Peru - were
flown to London to collect their award and received a Sony
99 camera.
The wining series of works showcase
the very best in international contemporary photography,
from stunning black and white portraits of the Matterhorn
mountain to a witty set shot in the back of an Argentinian
limousine to a wry look at the secret life of the people of
North Korea. The winners are:
Architecture - Fabrice
Fouillet, France
Arts and Culture - Myriam Meloni, Italy
Campaign - Christian Åslund, Sweden
Conceptual -
Roman Pyatkovka, Ukraine
Contemporary Issues - Valerio
Bispuri, Italy
Current Affairs - Ilya Pitalev, Russia
Fashion - Klaus Thymann, Denmark
Landscape - Nenad
Saljic, Croatia
Lifestyle - Alice Caputo, Italy
Nature & Wildlife - Satoru Kondo, Japan
People -
Andrea Gjestvang, Norway
Portraiture - Jens Juul,
Denmark
Sport - Adam Pretty, Australia
Still Life -
Vanessa Colareta, Peru
Travel - Gali Tibbon, Israel
Outstanding Contribution to Photography –
William Eggleston
Iconic American photographer
William Eggleston was awarded the Outstanding Contribution
to Photography prize. Collected by Winston Eggleston
on behalf of their father, the award was presented to
William Eggleston for his influence on colour photography
and, in turn, the influence he has on many of today’s most
revered working photographers.
To mark the award,
rarely-seen images from Eggleston are published in the 2013
Sony World Photography Awards book and a further selection
at on show at Somerset House from 26 April -12 May. The
Outstanding Contribution Award has previously been given to
William Klein, Eve Arnold, Bruce Davidson, Marc Riboud and
Phil Stern.
Student Focus Photographer of
the Year - Natalia Wiernik,
Poland
In a programme that now includes
over 230 universities worldwide, the Student Focus award is
the largest of its kind. Polish photographer Natalia
Wiernik, who competed for the Student Focus Photographer of
the Year title on behalf of her university, the Jan Matejko
Academy of Fine Arts, Krakow, Poland, was announced as the
winner and presented with €35,000 worth of Sony digital
imaging equipment for her university.
Youth
Photographer of the Year - Alecsandra Dragoi,
Romania
A striking image of a New Year festival
in Romania won nineteen year-old Alecsandra Dragoi the title
of Youth Photographer of the Year. From Romania and
currently at university in the UK, Dragoi image was chosen
as the single best photograph taken by a photographer under
the age of 20.
2013 Kraszna-Krausz Book
Awards winners
The Kraszna-Krausz Book Awards
are a proud partner of the Sony World Photography Awards.
Two stunning books share the awards’ £10,000 prize for
the best photography and best moving image books of the
year. They are:
Best Photography Book Award - War /
Photography: Images of Armed Conflict and Its
Aftermath by Anne Wilkes Tucker, Will Michels and
Natalie Zest (Yale University Press)
Best Moving Image
Book Award - Hollywood Costume by Deborah Nadoolman
Landis (V&A Publishing)
The Kraszna-Krausz Foundation
also presented Thames and Hudson Chairman Thomas Neurath
with their Outstanding Contribution to Publishing award at
the ceremony.
Galleries of all the winning and
finalist images can be seen at www.worldphoto.org
Winning
images are available to download via press.worldphoto.org
and via
Image.net.
ENDS