Get your cameras ready!
The Sony World Photography Awards 2025 is now open
This week we put stunning images by photographers from Russia in the spotlight
Pangolins are the world’s most illegally trafficked mammals, with an estimated one million trafficked to Asia in the last 10 years.
The Chukchi have lived along the Bering coasts for thousands of years.
Lop Nor is a former salt lake, now largely dried-up, located in Xinjiang province in northwest China.
The recently founded Mauritanian women's national football team played its first international match against Djibouti last summer and was defeated 3-1.
Witness Objects features a series of items involved in conflicts ranging from the First World War to the Siege of Sarajevo, converted into pinhole cameras.
Kill Me With an Overdose of Kindness is the result of several years collecting snapshots and screengrabs from online posts, chats, Skype and WhatsApp calls.
Plexus is a photographic case study that uses Elena's family home and archival material to investigate her ancestors' history.
Maria Kokunova has deliberately restricted social contact and limited her media consumption so her whole life is bound up in her home, children and art practice, to create what she describes as her 'personal cave'.
By 2050 our planet will be home to as many as ten billion people. If increases in agricultural yield are not achieved, a billion or more people could face starvation.
The Sony World Photography Awards 2025 is now open