The World Photography Organisation is a British company best known for its annual Sony World Photography Awards. The company was founded in 2007 by Scott Gray, and is now a subsidiary of Gray's art events company Creo.[2][3][4][5]
The World Photography Organisation hosts a year-round portfolio of events including the Sony World Photography Awards, and Photofairs[6]—art fairs dedicated to presenting fine art photography and moving image.
The company also creates, produces and delivers photographic events[7] for a variety of partners, from exhibitions of individual artists, to platforms on the subject of photography involving artists, and curators from over 20 countries.
Created by the World Photography Organisation, the Sony World Photography Awards[8] are held annually. The awards are for photography from the past year and across a variety of photographic genres.
More than 1.5 million images[9] from 200+ countries[10][11] and territories have been entered to the awards since their inception.
The Sony World Photography Awards features four competitions:
Professional – bodies of work across 10 categories
Open – the best single images across 10 categories
Youth – work from young photographers aged 12 to 19
Student – work from photography students
The awards are judged annually by museum and gallery directors, curators, publishers, writers and artists.[12] They are also supported by the World Photographic Academy.[13]
Each year the Sony World Photography Awards honor one selected person / chosen people with its Outstanding Contribution to Photography prize. Past recipients of this prize include:[14]
The first Sony World Photography Awards ceremony was held in Cannes, subsequent ceremonies are annually held in London each April,[45] and followed by an exhibition of the year's winning and shortlisted works at Somerset House in London.[46] The artworks are then shown around the world as part of the Sony World Photography Awards Exhibition tour.
Winning photographers also share cash prizes, Sony digital imaging equipment, publication in the annual Sony World Photography Awards book.[47] Overall and Professional category winners are also flown to the London Awards ceremony.[48]
The World Photography Organisation created the Photofairs[49] brand in 2014. Its aim is to hold boutique events of traditional still photography through to large-scale installations, video works and the cutting edge of technology.
Launched in 2015, the Zeiss Photography Award[52] was a collaboration between the World Photography Organisation and Zeiss.
The international photography contest annually invited photographers to submit bodies of work addressing a selected theme. All entries were free and the jury was specifically looking for artworks with a strong narrative. Winners received €12,000 worth of Zeiss lenses, €3,000 to cover travel costs for a photography project, an exhibition in London and the opportunity to work with Zeiss and the World Photography Organisation.