Get your cameras ready!
The Sony World Photography Awards 2025 is now open
"I take photographs intuitively around the subject or I try anew technique, not really knowing where it may lead"
Michael Runkel is a travel photographer who specializes in UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Read more in our interview!
"I would like the students not think too much about the images they enter."
"I believe that photography has a great power of denunciation, it allows one to open the eyes and to sensitize, but it also allows you to promote a change of view."
"I enjoy a lot when I shoot, particularly when I’m with friends that have common interests. I enjoy having a good time while exploring the beauty of the world."
Photographer Amanda Harman is publishing a book called “A Fluid Landscape,” based on a series that was shortlisted in the Landscape category of the 2018 Sony World Photography Awards.
Luis Arevalo explains how at his darkest moments, going outdoors has given him comfort and has allowed space to heal.
Megan Johnson was the Youth winner of the 2018 Sony World Photography Awards. She currently works at a local product and marketing company as their product photographer.
“The experience in South America was amazing. It really made me develop my style so much and slowly find my voice. I think it helped me organize much better how to develop my work,” he explains.
"Something that makes my task very easy is the fact that my subjects don't move. And something that makes my task very hard is the fact that my subjects don't move!"
The Sony World Photography Awards 2025 is now open