Category: Photographers

  • Amy Horowitz

    Amy Horowitz

    About the Collection

    There is a freedom in outward expression of any sort but amplified by the year spent indoors hiding from a deadly virus, freedom beginning in the Spring of 2021 took on a distinctive aura: a bold, colorful one. On the surface, there was a vibrancy, a specific mix of joy, defiance, morality, kindness, and a bit of despair, that I like to think is tinged with hope. Underneath the dyed hair and accessories, tatoos, and thigh high boots, stands someone’s son, someone’s daughter, a human with hopes and vulnerabilities. While we’re all trying to find our way in the world, the beauty of these people is in their self-expression. The people here seem to unabashedly bare and present themselves to the world. They tell their truth and what could be more beautiful? What ultimately propels me to ask, “Can I take your portrait?” is a warmth I sense, something soft underneath the shell. Taking these portraits, I get inside, even if only for a short while. Interacting with these individuals, with their persistent youthful energy, I find myself both stimulated and grounded. Perhaps these young people can sense I’m a mother, allowing them ease and comfort when interacting with me. On one occasion, a young person asked me for a band aid, perhaps rightly pegging me as a “nurturer.” Maybe that’s why most comply when I ask for a portrait. I’ve raised three children, now in their late 20’s, in the homogenous New Jersey suburbs. Individuality and diversity were a rarity there and perhaps that’s why I now document those on the cusp of adulthood in New York City, one of the most culturally diverse in the nation. One of the more interesting things I’ve found is how quickly a connection can be formed between two strangers, with the camera’s lens serving as a conduit. So, when I begin shooting, I direct people by saying, “Okay, look in my eyes, and whatever you do, don’t smile.” Oddly, these words seem to put people at ease.

    ©Amy Horowitz

    Ben From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
    Name Unknown From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
    Leo From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
    Cassidy & Ava From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
    Armaan From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
    Aaron From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
    Unknown Name From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
    Tibet From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
    Name Unknown From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
    Phoenix From the Don\’t Smile NYC Project
  • Adam Miller

    Adam Miller

    About the Collection

    In the brisk embrace of New York’s blizzard season, I’m called to the streets, much like a jazz musician is drawn to a piano. Manhattan becomes a stage, and as the city’s denizens, often caught off-guard, wade through blizzards, their dance narrates tales of resilience and spontaneity. With my trusted film Leica as an extension of my vision, I gradually find my rhythm, moving from a hesitant observer to a dynamic participant. I choose film, an ode to the classics, infusing each frame with depth and a timeless palette. The challenges of a slower shutter speed, born from on-camera flash limitations, became my melody, bringing out the fluidity and fervor of winter moments. Every shot isn’t just a capture but a unique lyrical expression of NYC’s winter symphony.

    ©Adam Miller

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  • Lu Wenpeng

    Lu Wenpeng

    About the Collection

     

    ©Lu Wenbeng

    ©Lu Wenpeng
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  • Dominic Dähncke

    Dominic Dähncke

    About

    He could be sitting next to me at the bar drinking coffee and I wouldn’t know it was him. He could find me on the street and ask me for a specific address, I would answer and I wouldn’t know it was him. Many people in my town know who he is. I do not know. Some have asked me if I want them to find out who he is. My answer is always no. I prefer intrigue. Maybe it’s because of fear, shame or simply that I’m not interested in him. I prefer to play and imagine what he is like, how he would relate to me, how he would talk to me, how he would scold me. The street is the ideal context to meet him. He is the opposite of a vampire: he only goes outside when it is sunny. That’s when we can agree, sit down (1) and talk. What are we talking about? Well, about how difficult it is to reconcile the punishment of the family tree on us (2), about how difficult it is not to lose your head when a hand hits you even if you don’t want to (3) and, in order to appear to be fine, you end up getting the first head you come across (4). We also talked about how even after that punishment, our hair ends up growing out in a ponytail (5). I often tell him how curious it is that I did not intend to follow his path, since I only aspired to have a dog (6) as a pet (that was enough for me), but from one day to the next she appeared in my head (7). Fifteen months after that appearance she is here to teach me that now I am his shadow and that he became a grandfather (8).

    ©Dominic Dähncke

    ©Dominic Dähncke
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    ©Dominic Dähncke
  • Jonathan Jasberg

    Jonathan Jasberg

    About the Collection

    Complex Coexistence is a series that portrays the intricate and interdependent relationship between humans and animals in urban environments. Through candid street photography, this collection offers a glimpse into the diverse ways we coexist, from reverence and care to commerce and survival. From revered Sika deer in Japan who have coexisted with locals for over 1,000 years as well as monkeys in Nepal viewed as descendants of the HIndu god of Hanuman to the shadow of a camel being led to slaughter and the shadow of a bird waiting to grab a dead fish baking under the sun, the daily scenes are complex both visually and culturally. The photographs in this series are from 9 cities spanning 7 countries in 3 continents.

    ©Jonathan Jasberg

    A boy leans out of his home window to greet a stray dog. Cairo, Egypt
    A stray cat in the old medina of Tunis, Tunisia going to eat out of one of the many food bowls left out by the community for the cats.
    Boys in Kathamandu, Nepal share their popsicle with a monkey carrying a baby.
    A Sika deer bows before retrieving a biscuit from a person walking through Nara, Japan
    A young man shops for ornamental fish at a market in Kolkata, India.
    A crow and an ominous doppelgänger shadow wait to swoop down and grab some dry fish in a small village in Sri Lanka.
    A camel being loaded up into a truck after being sold for its meat. Birqash, Egypt
    Traditional Mexican cowboys known as Charros performing in a Charreria in Oaxaca, Mexico.
    ©Jonathan Jasperg
  • Chloe Kerleroux

    Chloe Kerleroux

    About the Collection

    When the old and new worlds merge. Far from the Hollywood cliché of the Caucasian cowboy, Louisiana’s Afro-Americans have a long equestrian history since slavery and remain very active today.

    ©Chloe Kerleroux

    ©Chloe Kerleroux
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  • Francesca Chiacchio

    Francesca Chiacchio

    Biography

    I was born and raised in Napoli, a very contraddictory city who has been demonized for decades by many, especially by other italians. For a long time the city hasn’t had any tourism, because of its criminality. During pandemic though something changed, it was difficult to travel abroad and outside Europe, and people suddenly started to come to Napoli for their vacations. Its popularity grew in a very short time, thanks also to the winning of the italian soccer champions leaugue in 2023, and at the moment Napoli seems to be the most wanted travel destination in the world. Pandemic also forced me to shoot in the city, something that I had never felt confident in. Maybe because it’s my city, maybe because there are a lot of clichés about Napoli, or because in the past has been photographed a lot and it’s difficult to avoid beeing influenced by what is the image of this city in the world. Little by little I started to get more confident in going around the city with my camera, and I felt the need to show the city through my eyes. Eyes of someone that knows the city and its peculiarities, but at the same time, someone that lived abroad for many years and decided to come back knowing that wouldn’t be easy to fit in, like it never was.

    ©Francesca Chiacchio

    ©Francesca Chiacchio
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  • Street Photography Awards 2023

    Street Photography Awards 2023

    SERIES WINNER

    Kevin Wolf

    Mauritius
    A Photographic Essay About Istanbul

    The people of Istanbul are “infected” by a “state of mind that is as life-affirming as it is

    -negating”, the Istanbul-born writer Orhan Pamuk once wrote. This is known as „huzun”, a deep

    melancholy that can be experienced in all corners of the city. That “Istanbul feeling” is the subject of

    this series. On a photographic stroll along the Bosporus, the viewers discover a metropolis full of

    contradictions. Standing between the mills of political Islam and Western capitalism, between Asia and

    Europe, Istanbul has to define itself again and again.

    SINGLE IMAGE WINNER

    Anna Biret

    France
    Touch Me with Your Gaze

    Anna Biret, Touch Me with Your Gaze

    FINALISTS

    Vladimir Karamazov

    Vladimir Karamazov

    Bulgaria
    Hotel under the Stars

    Mark Alan Zilberman

    USA
    Objectified

    Paul Kessel

    Paul Kessel

    USA
    Knockout

    Didier Vanderperre

    Didier Vanderperre

    USA
    Babysitting in the Philippines

    Fabio Renzi

    Fabio Renzi

    Italy
    Drop here

    Juan Carlo Calingo

    Juan Carlo Calingo

    USA
    Northbound

    Snow Blizzard Chronicles

    Adam Miller

    USA
    Snow Blizzard Chronicles

    Dominic Dähncke

    Dominic Dähncke

    Santa Cruz de Tenerife
    He

    Alexandra Thannhäuser

    Alexandra Thannhäuser

    Germany
    In Between

    Farhad Babayev

    Farhad Babayev

    Germany
    Lago di Garda

    Ilya Nikolayev

    Ilya Nikolayev

    USA
    Untitled

    Craig Buchan Buchan

    Craig Buchan Buchan

    Scotland
    Cockenzie No More

    Maude Bardet

    Maude Bardet

    The Netherlands
    Sfax Silhouette

    Alexandra Avlonitis

    Alexandra Avlonitis

    USA
    Platinum Blond

    Pier Andrea Perini

    Pier Andrea Perini

    Italy
    Untitled

    Alessandro Lasevoli

    Alessandro Lasevoli

    Italy
    Misteri

    Johnathan Jasperg

    Jonathan Jasperg

    USA
    Complex Coexistence

    Thomas Hackenberg

    Thomas Hackenberg

    Germany
    Beautiful People

    Francesca Chiacchio

    Francesca Chiacchio

    Italy
    Napolism

    Photos of Winners and Finalists will be showcased this year.

  • Forrest Walker

    Forrest Walker

    Biography

    Forrest Walker is an acclaimed street and documentary photographer from Portland, Oregon, USA. Graduating from the University of Oregon, he later became a self-taught photographer and has focused his life on photographing life, around the world. Awarded and exhibited across multiple continents, Forrest brings a passion for capturing candid interest from everyday life, along with a bold curiosity for exploration. He has been featured across media publications and photography events for his original documentary projects, unique eye and fearless nature. Followed online as the Major City/100 City Project, Forrest’s largest work had him walking over 20 km/day for five years, as he explored and photographed all aspects of big city life solo on foot, finding small worlds within each major city, while connecting the whole world through its people and life. Forrest’s other projects cover a range of topics, including fathers, population, and the phenomena of age, all with the same love for getting inside life to bring out the authentic character and unique interest it can contain.

    Populous: Tokyo, Japan © Forrest Walker
    Populous: Kathmandu, Nepal © Forrest Walker
    Populous: Yangon, Myanmar © Forrest Walker
    Populous: Accra, Ghana © Forrest Walker
    Populous: Istanbul, Turkey © Forrest Walker
    Populous: Lima, Peru © Forrest Walker
    Populous: Tashkent, Uzbekistan © Forrest Walker
    Populous: Johannesburg, South Africa © Forrest Walker
    Populous: Vancouver, Canada © Forrest Walker
    Populous: Brussels, Belgium © Forrest Walker
  • Simona Bonnano

    Simona Bonnano

    About

    About Simona Bonanno
    Simona Bonanno is a visual artist that works mostly with photography. Sicilian born, she studied in Paris, at the ESAG Penninghen school of art direction and interior architecture. Graduated at Academy of Fine Arts in Italy, she was selected for a European Union scholarship at the Paris 8 University, France. In 2013 she had her first photography solo exhibition in Nyon, Switzerland, at Galerie Focale. Her artworks have been shown in several exhibitions, in Italy and abroad. A limited edition print has been auctioned at Snap! Toronto (Canada, 2014); two prints have been acquired by the Bibliothèque National de France. She won several awards, including Lens Culture Street Photo Award, International Women in Photo Association (2022), All About Photo (2016), the Grand Prix de Découverte (2013), the Julia Margaret Cameron Award (2011). Her photographs have been featured in networks and magazines worldwide, such as CNN, RTS UN, Resource Magazine, Amateur Photographer, Fotografia Reflex, National Geographic, Digital Camera Magazine. Bonanno lives and works in Sicily.

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  • Thomas Hackenberg

    Thomas Hackenberg

    Biography

    German street photographer Thomas Hackenberg was born in 1963 and lives in the city of Braunschweig. With first strong influences going back to the work of Henri Cartier-Bresson and German photojournalist Thomas Hoepker, he is devoted to the idea of candid, unstaged street photography in the public realm.

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  • Lenny Ruiz

    Lenny Ruiz

    Biopgraphy

    I am inspired by a love for the urban environment and its endless supply of stories to capture. My approach to street photography is influenced by Saul Leiter, William Eggleston, Ernst Haas, Vivian Maier and Fred Herzog, among others. I tend to spend a lot of my free time doing urban walks and looking for new views of the city.

    ©LennyLuiz

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