The Ice Bear
Paul Souders/National Geographic Photo Contest
Grand Prize and Nature Winner. A polar bear peers up from beneath the melting sea ice on Hudson Bay as the setting midnight sun glows red from the smoke of distant fires during a record-breaking spell of hot weather. The Manitoba population of polar bears, the southernmost in the world, is particularly threatened by a warming climate and reduced sea ice.
Et bilde av en isbjørn ble kåret til årets beste i National Geographic Photo Contest 2013.
Amerikanske Paul Souders fikk hovedprisen i National Geographic Photo Contest 2013 med et bilde av en isbjørn som kikker opp fra den smeltende isen med midnattsola i bakgrunnen. Bildet er tatt i Hudson Bay.
Souders har jobbet som profesjonell fotograf i 30 år. Han vant også en førstepris i årets Wildlife Photographer of the Year-konkurranse med et lignende bilde fra samme shoot.
- Bjørnen svømte opp til isfjellet, dukket under og holdt seg under vann i flere sekunder mens jeg flyttet zodiacen og deretter holdt kameraet på en seks fot lang boom nær inngangen. Jeg tok ikke bilder før hun kom opp for å puste og ta en kikk på meg, og jeg fortsatte å skyte til hun dukket under igjen, uttaler Souders i et intervju på National Geographic-bloggen Proof.
National Geographic Photo Contest arrangeres årlig, og kårer årets beste bilder i tre kategorier: People, Places og Nature. En av disse får hovedprisen.
Danske Cecilie Baudier fikk førsteplass i kategorien People med bildet Together Alone. Bildet viser to identiske tvillinger på 15 år og er en del av en større bildeserie. Malaysiske Adam Tan fikk førsteplass i kategorien Places med bildet Long Road to Daybreak. Bildet ble tatt i Yuanyang, i Kina en tidlig morgen i 2012.
Årets utgave av konkurransen mottok 7000 bilder fra fotografer i 150 land. Juryen besto av blant annet Ed Kashi og Stephanie Sinclair. Hovedvinnerne får $10 000 og en tur til National Geographics hovedkvarter i Washington DC for å delta på et fotoseminar. Alle kategorivinnerne får bildene sine publisert i National Geographic Magazine. Les mer om konkurransen på www.ngphotocontest.com
Se alle vinnerbildene inkludert de som fikk hederlig omtale under.
Together, Alone
Cecile Baudier/National Geographic Photo Contest
People Winner. This portrait of two identical twins (Nils and Emil, 15 years old) in Fyn, Denmark, is part of a series of pictures, portraying people who have a strong connection to another person and who often think of themselves as a 'we' instead of 'me'.
Long Road to Daybreak
Adam Tan/National Geographic Photo Contest
Places Winner. Realizing this old town (Laocheng, means old town in Chinese) would soon be transformed into a new town through the speedy economic growth in China and perhaps lose its raw beauty in no time, I was pleased to capture this working mother carrying her child in her basket walking through the thick mist in a very early foggy morning, 2012.
Crows Nest
Yosuke Kashiwakura/National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention Nature. The crows that live in Tokyo use clothes hangers to make nests. In such a large city, there are few trees, so the natural materials that crows need to make their nests are scarce. As a result, the crows occasionally take hangers from the people who live in apartments nearby, and carefully assemble them into nests. The completed nests almost look like works of art based on the theme of recycling.
Indian Rhino, Canadian Winter
Stephen De Lisle/National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention Nature. An Indian rhinoceros, far from home and stuck inside with late-winter blues at the Toronto zoo.
Flying Egrets
Réka Zsirmon/National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention Nature. On a good day in the field, a birder might see flock of birds. Great Egrets; Tidal area of the Danube in Hungary.
Cows And Kites
Andrew Lever/National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention Places. I was driving along the beach highway when I noticed the bulls sunbathing on the empty beach. I initially thought I was seeing things, but no it really was sunbathing cows! I had to park my car a fair distance away and that meant a long walk along the beach in 35-degree heat. It did not matter because I had to get the shot! When I got closer to them I was careful not to spook them so I crawled on my stomach on the hot sand to get a good picture of them. Mission Accomplished! It was worth the effort!
Graveyard
Julie Fletcher/National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention Places. I cannot describe the eerie feeling I had when I walked in on this scene. I followed a massive storm front several 100 kilometers hoping to capture something special but this blew my mind. The surreal milky green water is a natural phenomenon caused by electromagnetic activity from the lightning hitting the waters surface. There was no rain where I was and not much wind either but in the distance the sky was charged and angry subjecting its wrath over the graveyard of dead trees in this normally very dry lakebed. I was able to capture a series of unique images this being one of the best.
Arabic in Gambia
Bisig Maurin/National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention People. Arabic born in one of the biggest city in the World, New York. Right in the middle of the Bronx she grow and go to School. As she's 13 years old, her Father decides to send her to her Family in a small town named Bajakunda. Now she lives here without electricity and a two hours bus drive away from the next city. Working every day from early morning til late night. No chance to leave this Country. Arabic is the only person in this small town whit an official American Passport, everybody dream about that one but she cant use it anymore because of family tradition.
Ida
Cecile Baudier/National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention People. This is Ida. She is seven years old and born in Greenland. A year ago her mother, Marie, decided to move to Denmark in search of an easier life and to give her daughter everything that she never had, but even though the two countries are tied historically, the two cultures are very different and they have no Danish friends or any strong connections to Denmark. In Denmark, Greenlanders are seen as second-class citizens, drunks and socially challenged. This photo is part of an on-going series that is trying to show a different side to the greenlandish minority in Denmark.
Francesca
Michele De Punzio/National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention People. My girlfriend in her car at the stop street.
Life Along The Polluted River
Andrew Biraj/National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention People. A boy plays with balloons by Buriganga River as smoke emits from a dump yard during sunset in Dhaka, Bangladesh
Laurentiu
Aurélie Geurts /National Geographic Photo Contest
Honorable Mention People. This picture is a part of the series of my work ëFrumoasaí. "Frumoasa" is Romanian for 'beauty'. It's a work about Laurentiu and his family. They live in shacks next to the railway near the Ghent Dampoort. I met him and his family in December 2012. They have to deal with all kind of obstacles on a daily basis. The lack of a legal address gave them administrative problems and made it hardly impossible for them to find a decent job. They form a happy, warm and close family, despite the constant uncertainty in which they live.
Les også:
Araujo til topps i National Geographic-konkurranse
National Geographic Photo Contest 2012
Reiste norskekysten på langs for National Geographic
National Geographic Photo Contest 2011