A global platform giving visibility to photographers worldwideCreative' and Discovery' categories introduced to challenge photographers
New grant opportunity available to winning photographers
Images available at press.worldphoto.org
Being named Photographer of the Year has given me more exposure than I could ever have imagined. Frederik Buyckx, Sony World Photography Awards winner 2017
June 1, 2017: The 2018 Sony World Photography Awards, one of the world's leading photography competitions, are now open for entries. Submissions are free at www.worldphoto.org
The 11th edition of the Awards is marked by the introduction of two challenging new categories in the Professional competition, Creative' and Discovery', and an important new opportunity for award-winners to secure a grant to fund future photographic projects.
Created by the World Photography Organisation, the Sony World Photography Awards are an authoritative voice in the industry and the world's biggest photography competition. Celebrating the finest contemporary photography from the past year, the Awards give vast exposure, visibility and opportunity to photographers worldwide on an annual basis.
Commenting on the Awards' impact, 2017 Sony World Photography Awards winner Frederik Buyckx said: Being named Photographer of the Year has given me more exposure than I could ever have imagined. It has opened lots of new doors but, just as an importantly, the award has also encouraged me to keep on working on my personal projects.
Changing medium of photography prompts new Professional categories
In recognition of the changing use of photography, two new categories have been added to the 2018 Awards' Professional competition.
The new Creative' and Discovery' categories are both designed to embrace photographers working at the cutting-edge of the medium. Judges will specifically look to reward originality, experimentation and imagination in these categories and hope to discover what that would otherwise be unseen by the Awards. Artistic interpretation, integrity and technical ability are the key factors for judges across all categories of the Awards.
The Sony World Photography Awards comprise of four competitions:
Professional - 10 categories judged upon a body of work (5-10 images)
Open - best single images across 10 categories
Youth - young photographers aged 12-19 responding to a brief with a single image
Student Focus - for those studying photography
For the full list of competition categories and descriptions please go to www.worldphoto.org/sony-world-photography-awards
New Sony Grant to fund photographic projects
In demonstration of the Awards' commitment to create opportunities for its photographers, a new grant programme those participating in the Professional and Student Focus competitions has been introduced this year.
From the winners of the 2018 Professional categories, Sony will award multiple grants of $7,000 to selected photographers to pursue photographic projects of their choice.
In addition, shortlisted photographers from the Student Focus competition will each be given $3,500 (USD) to work together on a new photographic commission set by Sony and the World Photography Organisation.
The Sony Grant programme has been formalised for the 2018 Awards following a successful pilot with three 2016 Sony World Photography Awards Professional category winners:Am lie Labourdette, Maroesjka Lavigne and Nikola Linares. The inaugural Sony grants supported diverse projects including the documentation of young bullfighters in Spain (Linares), landscapes of Iceland and Namibia (Lavigne) and the impact of man on the Tunisian desert (Labourdette).
For more details about the recipients of the 2017 Sony Grant recipients please see Notes to Editors below. Images from the series are available at press.worldphoto.org
Prizes: Worldwide exposure, exhibitions and digital imaging equipment
All category winners of the Professional, Open, Youth and Student Focus competitions will receive digital imaging equipment from Sony.
In addition, cash prizes of $25,000 (USD) will be presented to the Photographer of the Year and $5,000 (USD) to the overall Open competition winner.
All category winners plus many of the shortlisted Awards photographers will be exhibited at the annual Sony World Photography Awards Exhibition in London and then toured internationally. The images will also be published in the annual Awards winners' book and all shortlisted and winning photographers are given global exposure via dedicated marketing and press campaigns.
2018 Key dates
December 4, 2017 - Student Focus closes
January 4, 2018 - Open & Youth competitions close
January 1, 2018 - Professional competitions close
February 27, 2018 -Shortlist announced
March 27, 2018 - Open and National Awards winners revealed
April 19, 2018 - Photographer of the Year & Professional category winners announced
For all press enquiries please contact
Press department, World Photography Organisation
+ 44 (0) 20 7886 3043 / press@worldphoto.org
NOTES TO EDITORS
2017 Sony Grant recipients - images available at press.worldphoto.org
Nikolai Linares (b. 1983, Denmark) won the 2017 Professional Sport category with his series Second Best and is a photojournalist. His new work, The Boys and the Bulls follows the pursuits of the boys and young men studying to become bullfighters in the city of Almer a, southern Spain.
Maroesjka Lavigne (b.1989, Belgium) is a fine art photographer currently represented by Robert Mann Gallery, New York. Winner of the Professional Landscape category in 2017, her series Out of the Blue investigates the geological and aesthetic qualities of the land in X and X.
Am lie Labourdette (b. 1974, France) is a visual artist and winner of the 2016 Sony World Photography Aw










