CR Blog

World Press Photo 2010

Photography

Posted by Mark Sinclair, 12 February 2010, 16:27    Permalink    Comments (11)

The winners of the World Press Photo awards were announced earlier today. Pietro Masturzo's photograph of a group of women shouting from a Tehran rooftop in protest at the Iranian presidential results took Photo of the Year. Click through for the rest of the winning work...

Masturzo's photograph is part of a story depicting the nights following the contested presidential elections in Iran, when people shouted their dissent from roofs and balconies, after daytime protests in the streets. The story as a whole was awarded first prize in the category People in the News. 

Juror Kate Edwards (picture editor of the Guardian Weekend Magazine) remarked that "the photo has a powerful sense of atmosphere, tension, fear – but also of quietness and calm, and in this sense was a challenge as a choice. We were looking for an image that drew you in, took you deeper, made you think more – not just about showing what we already know, but something that asks more of us."

This year the jury also decided to name a Special Mention and, unusually, it went to a frame grab from a video posted on YouTube in June 2009 during the post-election uprising in Iran. The still from the video depicts a woman identified as Neda Agha-Soltan lying on the ground after being shot in the chest. Warning: The image is extremely graphic in nature and so appears at the very bottom of this post after a gap. 

On the selection of the still from the film of Agha-Soltan's death, jury member David Griffin of National Geographic commented, "I am pleased that World Press Photo has provided an avenue for non-professional images that have a significant impact on the historical visual record." The WPP jury considers an image for a Special Mention when it has played an essential role in the news reporting of the year worldwide and could not have been made by a professional photographer.

Here are some highlights from the rest of the sections. Again, it goes without saying, but please be aware that some of the images are upsetting. 

SPOT NEWS SINGLES 1st Adam Ferguson, Australia, VII Mentor Program for The New York Times. Afghan woman rushed from the scene of a suicide bombing, Kabul, 15 December

 

SPOT NEWS STORIES 1st Walter Astrada, Argentina, Agence France-Presse. Bloodbath in Madagascar, February

 

GENERAL NEWS SINGLES 1st Kent Klich, Sweden. Gaza photo album: Tuzzah, Gaza Strip, 3 March

 

GENERAL NEWS STORIES 1st Marco Vernaschi, Italy, for Pulitzer Center, Guinea Bissau

 

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS SINGLES 2nd David Guttenfelder, USA, The Associated Press. US soldiers respond to Taliban fire outside their bunker, Korengal Valley

 

SPORTS ACTION SINGLES 1st Gareth Copley, United Kingdom, Press Association. England's Jonathan Trott is run out at the fifth Ashes test match, London, 20 August

 

SPORTS ACTION STORIES. 1st Donald Miralle, Jr., USA. Ironman World Championships, Hawaii

 

SPORTS FEATURES SINGLES 1st Robert Gauthier, USA, Los Angeles Times Magazine. Yankee fans try to distract Angels left fielder Juan Rivera, Yankee Stadium, 25 October

 

SPORTS FEATURES STORIES 1st Elizabeth Kreutz, USA. Lance Armstrong's comeback

 

CONTEMPORARY ISSUES SINGLES 2nd Stefano De Luigi, Italy, VII Network for Le Monde Magazine. Giraffe killed by drought, northeast Kenya, September

 

CONTEMPORARY ISSUES STORIES 1st Eugene Richards, USA, Reportage by Getty Images for The Sunday Times Magazine/Paris Match. War Is Personal, USA

 

DAILY LIFE SINGLES 2nd Joan Bardeletti, France. Sunday picnic, Mozambique

 

DAILY LIFE STORIES 1st Gihan Tubbeh, Peru. Adrian, 13-year old autist

 

PORTRAITS SINGLES 1st Laura Pannack, United Kingdom, Lisa Pritchard Agency for The Guardian Weekend magazine. Graham, anorexic teenager

 

PORTRAITS STORIES 2nd Annie van Gemert, the Netherlands. Boys and girls

 

ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT SINGLES 1st Malick Sidibé, Mali, for The New York Times Magazine Fashion portfolio: Prints and the Revolution, Mali

 

ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT STORIES 1st Kitra Cahana, Canada, Fabrica for Colors Rainbowland, New Mexico

 

NATURE SINGLES 1st Joe Petersburger, Hungary, National Geographic. Hunting kingfisher, Hungary

 

NATURE STORIES 1st Paul Nicklen, Canada, National Geographic. South Georgia, Antarctica

More at worldpressphoto.org.

Warning: Please be aware that the following image is of an extremely graphic nature. It is a still taken from a film uploaded to YouTube in June 2009 during the post-election uprising in Iran, which depicted the death of Neda Agha-Soltan. You can read more about the incident on this Wikipedia page, Death of Neda Agha-Soltan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

11 Comments

I will never forget last father's day. Neda was a shining point in all human history, a sad but unforgettable change in the global dynamic that will never be undone.
Mich De Lorme
2010-02-13 22:12:56


Brilliant and powerful images from around the world. A very brave choice for the first prize - initially I thought it was a poor submission - but thinking about the situation in Iran at the moment and the almost daily stories of protests and persecution, it makes sense. Photographs that make you think, rather than shock are always going to have a longer shelf-life for viewers - if only some picture editors thought like that as well !
Liverpool Photographer
2010-02-16 14:28:52


A real example of a picture telling a thousand words. I think the faults within the image only add to it's beauty.
Anys
2010-02-16 19:53:59


I must say that I am not impressed with the winning photo. If you don't know the story behind the woman screaming it is really just an ordinary picture. In my opinion a press photo should tell a story.
Michael
2010-02-18 14:24:11


Nice picture was selected. They(we) shout and shout to make dictator understand what we want , to make world understand why Neda died for. You should be in Iran in that time to touch every thing.
S. a protester
2010-02-28 14:59:24


I agree with Michael's comment above. How do we know that these women simply aren't exchanging profanities with women from a feuding family, on the next roof. The image is made from such a distance that the human figures become consumed by their building context - with the low light exacerbating the situation. Sorry WPP judges, but this one wasn't well thought through.
David
2010-03-02 08:11:50


I agree with Michael and David's comments...
It is the picture which should tell the story,not the caption what picture is all about.
With due respect ! I don't agree what Ms Kate has remarked that "the photo has a sense of atmosphere,tension or fear etc.well i couldn't fell any sense of fear or tension,
i couldn't find any thing to think on it,
wt else one can look at and think more when picture is not speaking any thing.
Anyways re-think JUDGES... (on the picture)
and Ya same is the case with the pic of stone pelter of Kashmir.
Yasir
2010-03-03 18:33:51


i'm just battered ....

what a world we live in!!! :(
potenta
2010-03-07 10:33:04


That kingfisher shot is a rip of Charlie Hamilton- james kingfisher pic, the lighting and bird angle is better on Charlies shot,
Double L
2010-03-08 17:07:13


great exhibition. well worth a look.
thelondonphoto
2010-11-18 15:11:39


If you think it appropriate that my 7 year old son and his friend nearly saw:
a) four images of a man (clearly identifiable, ie his terrified face fully visible) buried up to his waist just prior to, during and after being stoned to death (his head caved in drenched in blood) after a 'shariah' style execution, or
b) the face (again fully identifiable) of a dead child buried up to the neck in rubble or decapitated,
without any warnings of unsuitability for (god forbid) any family member or relative who might recognise them, children, or those like me who feel srongly that these people deserve more dignityin death than this 'prize-winning' photography show. Exactly how desensitized are we supposed to be? Luckily I was able to distract the boys just enough before making a hasty exit
- Voyeuristic horror for decadent people
martin
2010-11-29 19:06:47


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