YEARBOOK is our annual awards for photographers, open to all, whatever stage they are at in their career. The Awards and exhibition are promoted to people working within the creative industries and to those who commission photography. We reach out to editors and publishers to share work with them and introduce them to photographers they may not yet know about.
YEARBOOK is a group show, promoting the skill and talent of photographers working now. We invite you to explore the gallery and the huge range of styles and subjects from photographers across the world.
If you are an editor, director, curator or someone who commissions, promotes or supports photographers this directory is for you. Explore the photographers’ images featured in the exhibition and learn more about their work.
The images in the directory are sequenced alphabetically by surname. We encourage you to note down the names of the images and photographers that most catch your eye, you’d like to work with or commission and find out more about their work by clicking their name, below the gallery.
This aerial photograph captures a stunning nocturnal scene on the Chao Phraya River in Bangkok, with a fleet of boats adorned in radiant neon lights. Each vessel is outlined with vibrant hues that reflect off the water's surface, creating a vivid tapestry of colors against the dark backdrop of the river. The glimmering reflections mingle with the gentle ripples of the water, giving the scene a dreamlike quality. Searchlights from the boats pierce the darkness, adding dynamic beams to the composition. This image is not just a picture; it's a festive dance of light and color, showcasing the joy and exuberance of New Year's Eve celebrations in one of Asia's most vibrant cities.
Image description: This aerial photograph captures a stunning nocturnal scene on the Chao Phraya River in Bangkok, with a fleet of boats adorned in radiant neon lights. Each vessel is outlined with vibrant hues that reflect off the water's surface, creating a vivid tapestry of colors against the dark backdrop of the river. The glimmering reflections mingle with the gentle ripples of the water, giving the scene a dreamlike quality. Searchlights from the boats pierce the darkness, adding dynamic beams to the composition. This image is not just a picture; it's a festive dance of light and color, showcasing the joy and exuberance of New Year's Eve celebrations in one of Asia's most vibrant cities.
John Dennett, Leg D'Hon, Normandy Veteran joins eight fellow D-Day veterans who attended The Spirit of Normandy Trust press event for D-Day 80.
Image description: John Dennett, Leg D'Hon, Normandy Veteran joins eight fellow D-Day veterans who attended The Spirit of Normandy Trust press event for D-Day 80.
Hindu devotees perform rituals as they stand amidst the polluted waters of the river Yamuna covered with a layer of foam, on the occasion of the Chhath Puja festival in New Delhi, India. An enormous stretch of one of India's most sacred rivers, the Yamuna, is covered with toxic foam, caused partly by high pollutants discharged from industries around the national capital. Still, hundreds of devotees offer rituals in its frothy and toxic waters, sometimes even immersing themselves in the river for a holy dip, to mark special occasions and festivals.
Image description: Hindu devotees perform rituals as they stand amidst the polluted waters of the river Yamuna covered with a layer of foam, on the occasion of the Chhath Puja festival in New Delhi, India. An enormous stretch of one of India's most sacred rivers, the Yamuna, is covered with toxic foam, caused partly by high pollutants discharged from industries around the national capital. Still, hundreds of devotees offer rituals in its frothy and toxic waters, sometimes even immersing themselves in the river for a holy dip, to mark special occasions and festivals.
Trieste, Italy. October 9th, 2022. Barcolana number 54. 1614 sailboats at the start of the largest regatta in the world. The American Deep Blue, 26 meters and 25 tons,with Wendy at th helm, triumphs. The first Barcolana Won by a woman.
Image description: Trieste, Italy. October 9th, 2022. Barcolana number 54. 1614 sailboats at the start of the largest regatta in the world. The American Deep Blue, 26 meters and 25 tons,with Wendy at th helm, triumphs. The first Barcolana Won by a woman.
Kirkwall, Orkney Islands, Scotland, UK. 25th December 2023. The traditional Kirkwall Ba’ is played on the Orkney Islands between the ‘Up-the-Gates’ and the ‘Down-the-Gates’, (gates deriving from the Old Norse word ‘gata’, which means street). The game is at least 300 hundred years old and the Orcadians play their version of the Uppies and Downies on Christmas and New Years Day, other milder versions of the game take place across the British Isles during Shrovetide. Folklore claims the Orkney game was first played during Viking Earldom, when an Orcadian boy defeated a Scottish Tyrant by the name of Tusker in the Pentland Firth, and hailed the severed head of the tyrant from the Mercat Cross in Kirkwall. Played on open streets St. Magnus Cathedral is the middle ground with the Up-the-Gates goal opposite the Catholic Church and the Down-the-Gates scoring at the harbour. A win for the Uppies suggests a good harvest, and a win for the Doonies means a good catch of fish for the coming year. The ba’ is handmade each year, weighing 3lbs with a circumference of 28 inches, with a cork stuffing which makes the ba’ hard, and ensures it will float should the Down-the-Gates successfully reach the sea. The Orkney game has the reputation of being the most violent of the British mass ball games, a BBC documentary once commented that ‘it’s not so much a game, more a civil war’. Credit: Chris Strickland for The Telegraph
Image description: Kirkwall, Orkney Islands, Scotland, UK. 25th December 2023. The traditional Kirkwall Ba’ is played on the Orkney Islands between the ‘Up-the-Gates’ and the ‘Down-the-Gates’, (gates deriving from the Old Norse word ‘gata’, which means street). The game is at least 300 hundred years old and the Orcadians play their version of the Uppies and Downies on Christmas and New Years Day, other milder versions of the game take place across the British Isles during Shrovetide. Folklore claims the Orkney game was first played during Viking Earldom, when an Orcadian boy defeated a Scottish Tyrant by the name of Tusker in the Pentland Firth, and hailed the severed head of the tyrant from the Mercat Cross in Kirkwall. Played on open streets St. Magnus Cathedral is the middle ground with the Up-the-Gates goal opposite the Catholic Church and the Down-the-Gates scoring at the harbour. A win for the Uppies suggests a good harvest, and a win for the Doonies means a good catch of fish for the coming year. The ba’ is handmade each year, weighing 3lbs with a circumference of 28 inches, with a cork stuffing which makes the ba’ hard, and ensures it will float should the Down-the-Gates successfully reach the sea. The Orkney game has the reputation of being the most violent of the British mass ball games, a BBC documentary once commented that ‘it’s not so much a game, more a civil war’. Credit: Chris Strickland for The Telegraph
A fly, sitting on a flower petal and drinking a water drop. The leaf in the background sets the stage for the interesting behaviour of the animal. It almost seems a bit like a spotlight on the leading actor. Photo taken in my parents-in-law`s garden in Loitzendorf, Lower Bavaria, Germany.
Image description: A fly, sitting on a flower petal and drinking a water drop. The leaf in the background sets the stage for the interesting behaviour of the animal. It almost seems a bit like a spotlight on the leading actor. Photo taken in my parents-in-law`s garden in Loitzendorf, Lower Bavaria, Germany.
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