Each year we receive thousands of entries from talented photographers who have created complete bodies of work. Here are the most amazing photography books from Tokyo International Foto Awards 2020. 

Do Brumbies Dream in Red? - Tom Goldner

This book is a project driven by research which explores anthropogenic changes in the Australian landscape through the use of conceptual documentary photography. The Snowy Mountain brumby, is an Australian feral wild-roaming horse and can be discovered throughout the book's journey.

Abandoned Churches - Unclaimed Places of Worship - Francis Meslet

Hundreds of churches in Europe were left abandoned. The photographer, Francis Meslet took the challenge to discover and to immortalise these places of worship that were so full of people many years ago.

Sumo - Lord K2

One of the oldest sports in history, Sumo has been present for 2,000 years. The fighters live according to a strict code that they follow in and out of their dojo. This books uncovers their everyday life and lets us catch a glimpse into the backstage of dojo life. 

Ricochet - Rudolf Steiner

A portfolio of strange beauty - the photographer has been exploring the environment around his studio. Thanks to a special shooting technique, the photos show us abandoned tunnels, rocks and other natural elements through an even more interesting view. 

Caba - Ciudad Autonoma De Buenos Aires - Michele Molinari

Capturing a city's soul in images. The photographer, exploring Buenos Aires, shot the parts of the city she most loves: the skyline, buildings, the light and its people. The result? Beautiful, cheerful pictures that show the joyful heart of the city.

Brain Damage - Michele Di Donato

A photo essay in four chapters: "Craving", "Doppelgänger", "Lost in the K-Hole" and "Rorschach." Each of them uncovers different layers to psychological themes. It is strong, shocking and infinitely intriguing. 

Komorebi Black. A Forest That Remembers - Singo Tanaka

A photo book that is a story in itself. It is a mixture between sadness, fun and kindness and shows us these feelings in a colorful, visually appealing way.  

Antarctica: The Walking Giant - Sebastian Copeland

More than a decade's worth of trips around this area, the photographer wanted to raise public  awareness: if we do not stop climate change, the Earth will warm further and our maps will be redrawn leading to unforeseen consequences. 

Minidoka, Fabric of the Land - Timothy Floyd

According to jury member Timothy B. Anderson, this book demonstrates a "Wonderful layout. Perfect illustration of subject matter."  As one of the most beautiful photography books from Tokyo International Foto Awards 2020, this book examines the remnants of a World War II Japanese American concentration camp. It is heartbreaking and forceful at the same time. 

Where is Adam? - Cheraine Collette

A wholesome book dedicated to showing and preserving the natural beauty of the world we live in. It demonstrates the fact that to have live animals "perform" for photo shoots and shows is unnecessary in our modern world.

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TIFA was created to support and recognize not only those whose main source of income is photography, but student and amateurs photographers as well. The awards serve as a platform for these emerging artists to showcase their immense talent and for us to appreciate it. To shine the spotlight on them, we have compiled the best student photographers of Tokyo International Foto Awards 2020. 

My Way - Ta Hsiao Kuo

Sometimes, we need time to find ourselves. This was the case with non-professional photographer Ta Hsiao Kuo, who found his passion for photography at the age of 51. He keeps pushing on, developing his skills and testing them in competitions. 

Topographies of Fragility - Ingrid Weyland

A photography series to raise awareness for the damaging footprints humans leave on nature everywhere. The images are violently distorted to reflect the equally violent destruction of the environment. 

When the Trees are Gone - Diana Cheren Nygren

Another photo series to draw awareness to our environment: rising sea levels can endanger coastal cities and without a solution, can cause colossal problems in the future. The image series shows us a divide between man-made buildings and nature: people are looking for a place to to go to beach, will this be embedded in the cities soon? 

Kiss - Hong Chen

In the right place at the right time: a giraffe was giving birth in Masai Mara, Kenya when the photographer captured this image. 

Siblings - The Ups and Downs of Having One - Tan Chin Hock

Lessons, love, patience and a lot of fun: siblings are the way we learn empathy and unconditional love. This photo book transports us back into our childhoods with heartfelt images. 

The Starlit Grand Tetons – Bryony Richards

An image captured during the Perseids meteor shower, we rightfully feel like we just woke up in a dream or another dimension.

 

 

 

Snake Vs. Gecko - Wei Fu

The law of the jungle: fight, win and live to see another day, or lose and perish. It is in these photos we see the brutal face of nature, a very well-captured moment.

Limestone Quarry - Mona Hassan

Terrible conditions outside of Cairo in Egypt, these limestone mine workers are covered in dust and often get injuries that are life-threatening. They cover their eyes and mouths with scarves to protect them, but the white powder eventually gets everywhere. 

Disco Inferno - Rosetta Bonatti

Decay and entropy: a disco abandoned in Italy, this image is highly relevant in the times of Covid when places such as these had to shut down completely. 

Devotion - Patrick Ems

Ilulissat, Greenland: dogs awaiting a new journey into the cold and endless white, snow-covered landscape. 

Drying Fish - Phan Khánh

Long Hai fish market, Ba Ria - Vung Tau, Vietnam: this is the place to buy and sell seafood, especially dried scad. Thousands of trays full of fish are dried on the rooftops for one day.

What better way to travel across the world (in the middle of a worldwide lockdown), than seeing the impressive captures of the Best Architecture Photographers at TIFA? Join us on a tour that visits every corner of the Globe, peeking into ruins of buildings and modern giants.

Inside Out by Sharon Tenenbaum

A series of images posing the concept of eternity and temporary within the same frame. With an eye for geometry and talent for creating long exposure photos, the artist captures buildings in a powerful, ominous way.

Requiem Pour Pianos by Romain Thiery

Heartbreaking and immortal, the pianos left alone in abandoned mansions all around Europe causes us to pause and think of times past. Romain Thiery, pianist and photographer, believes the piano to be “deeply rooted in the depths of our culture” and pledged to explore the instrument from an original angle, documenting them in their current condition.

Liberty by Anna Illés

This unique photograph was taken from the sky in Budapest, Hungary. The Liberty Bridge connect the two city parts and was built between was built between 1894 and 1896. Later on, it was destroyed and rebuilt, the ruins of which can still be seen right under the bridge when the Danube is low.

Imaginary City (Battersea Power Station) by Daniel Sambraus

Slap-bang in the middle of London is the Battersea Power Station, in the progress of building, the photographer has visited the small city-within-a-city many times. The mirroring technique adapted by the artist makes it possible to isolate certain architectural elements within the photo, making them seem like enormous spaceships floating across the sky.

Shurreal Tokyo by Yulia Shur

Busy, chaotic and breathtaking, the buildings of Tokyo tower above its residents like giants looking at miniature figures going about their daily routines. This photo series is an homage to this world, combinations of architectural landscapes, infused with lines and colors, futuristic and surreal mixtures, slick surfaces, voluminous structures, grid graphs.

Larung Gar by Attila Balogh

A crowded community in a beautiful, secluded place: Larung Gar is the local name for the society of Tibetan and Han Chinese students attending the Serta Larung Five Science Buddhist Academy. People living in these buildings are nuns, monks and students, making it one of the world’s largest Buddhist centers.

Zenith by Tom Leighton

Playing with symmetry often leads to a loss of where we are, vantage points can disappear leaving us roaming a space with no sense of direction. The artist successfully converted architectural elements into an almost alien-like image, leaving the viewer perplexed as to where he or she stands in the space.

Snake’S Zaha by Roberto Corinaldesi

The Hadid Heydar Aliyev Center in Baku is a colossal building that features amazing edges and curves, making it look modern and powerful. The photographer took sections of the building and, considering shadows and light, captured images to accentuate these curves and the mighty presence of the construction. This is how the “snake” was born.

Monument Valley by Jonas Daley

The Monument Valley Geoscience Museum can be found on the volcanic islands, Zhangzhou. Like stepping into a dream, the Monument Valley Geoscience Museum is a building with colorful exterior walls and structural geometry that is infinitely pleasing to the eye, making the photographs look like perfect paintings.

Aqua Marine by Vincent Dupont-Blackshaw

An old-school, charming swimming pool in Ontario Canada – the artist sees hotel swimming pools as a curiosity due to their unique style and historic elements and the fact that they every so often overlook the city. In this instance, the CW Tower is visible right from the water body.

 

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Last year was one full of events happening on a roll – even with most of us in lockdown, we could barely keep up with news related to the pandemic and demonstration sweeping across the world. The photographers documenting the below events have often exhibited immense bravery to show the world these happenings. To honor their hard work, we have collected the 15 best editorial photographs at TIFA 2020.

Coronavirus Confinement in Spain  – Santiago Martinez De Septien

As the government brought the lockdown regulations alive, millions of children became stuck at home in Spain. A country where the rules of the lockdown were among the strictest in the EU, children had to stay at home instead of going to kindergarten and school, without being able to exercise and play with friends. In a lot of these cases, children developed depression. Jury member Timothy B. Anderson commented on the structure of the photograph: “Excellent use of shapes and geometric lines, complemented by the form of the human figure.” 

 

Jin! Jiyan! Azadi! (Women! Life! Freedom!) – Yusuke Suzuki

Syria, Rojava. The Kurdish Women’s Defence Force is a group made of warrior women who fight with AK47s in their hands for the liberation of maltreated people and the rights of women. The Force was formed in 2013 and since then has been active in helping oppressed people, demonstrating infinite courage and love for their birth land and the people living on it.

 

Garbage In The Cloud – Piotr Zwarycz

When the smoke rises in recycling points, landfills and garbage sorting facilities, the air becomes full with toxic substances. These act like poison for the human body, often causing serious and long-term illnesses.

 

In the Wrong Place at the Wrong Time – Accidental Victims of Drug Gangs – Eduardo Lopez Moreno

An ordinary man was sitting on a bench in the town square in Mexico, at the wrong place in the wrong time. Two drug gangs got into an altercation in the same square, leaving the man dead by complete accident. The photo series shows us his burial, laced with traditions rooted in rural Mexico, the State of Jalisco.

 

David and Golia – Davide Bonaldo

In the middle of Las Ramblas in Barcelona, a man is arrested. The event happened during the riots and demonstrations caused by the imprisonment of Catalan leaders by the Spanish government. The riots kept going for more than a week.

Akuapem – João Miguel Barros

The yearly Odwira Festival is celebrated in Akuapem, Ghana every September. Among the countless traditions, events and activities, we find boxing, and the images show the fighters in town square as well as the ring, allowing us to catch a glimpse into the spectators as well.

 

I Am Not Disabled – Silvia Alessi

The photographer met many amputated artists during her time in Tokyo, among them Punk pop singer Masami Orimo, who carries herself with pride, showing her amputated leg on stage as well as playing it like an instrument. The mission of this series of images is to help other who are in a similar situation to realize that women with disabilities can also be stylish.

 

Covid-19 Patient at the Intensive Care Unit – Ólafur Steinar Rye Gestsson

A heartbreaking image captured at the intensive care unit at Herlev Hospital, Copenhagen where nurse comforts a Covid-19 patient.

 

Forgotten Neighborhood – Rui Minderico

A small neighborhood with a 115,000 population just outside of Lisbon, Setúbal is home to people from former colonies coming to search for a better life. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, many of them have lost their jobs and now feel that the city has forgotten about them. Things got even worse when some of the houses were demolished due to safety concerns by the city.

 

Women Protesting in Poland Over Abortion Ban – Bartosz Mateńko

In October 2020, women gathered in the streets of Szczecin, Poland, enraged over severe restrictions on the abortion law. Across the whole country, women and their supporters blocked the flow of traffic to express their enragement over the main court banning almost all abortion – the red lightning on the protesters’ faces are symbols of fight against this law.

 

I Am Rohingya – Mohammad Rakibul Hasan

For hundreds of years, the Rohingya people have lived in Myanmar. A Muslim ethnic group of almost one million people, they were declared stateless, having migrated from Bangladesh. They are one of the most oppressed people, having been persecuted for centuries, their lands and citizenship taken away from them. Jury member Susan Baraz said of the photography series: “This photo essay is gut wrenching and exquisitely shot telling this horrendous struggle for a survival of a people. Perfectly shot and it makes you feel you’re in the middle of this chaos. Well done!” 

 

Living in a Refugee Camp – Eduardo Lopez Moreno

Images captured in the Refugee camps of Daadb and Kakuma in Kenya and Markasi in Djibouti – the mission of this series of photographs is to give a voice to people living in these camps. Although there are designated spaces for schools and markets, most of the people living here have no way of telling what their future will hold.

Say Their Names – Tim Evans

The photographer created this series by following the events in Minneapolis in May 2020 when protests sparked in the city as a response to George Floyd’s murder. While depicting the vast material damage caused by the demonstrations, the images aim to commemorate the fact that people stood up against racial injustice.

 

Burning Trees – Gabrielle Saveri

Ancient trees in the Napa Valley, Northern California. On September the 10th, the photographer wanted to go for a walk with her dog, she thought the sun was up. Instead, she discovered that the light was caused by fires raging around the woods in the region. Even though the sunlight was blocked by the dust and smoke, the trees’ silhouettes give us a beautiful contour.

 

Hong Kong Conflict – Wei Fu

Receiving a Gold in the Editorial / Conflict category at the 2020 Tokyo International Foto Awards, Wei Fu photographer documented the violent protests that broke out in the Summer of 2019 against the extradition treaty, between Hong Kong protesters and mainland Chinese authorities.

 

 

A large variety of photograph series shot for official or their very own campaigns, these brilliant advertising photographs from 2020 TIFA winners show us the perfect harmony between images and conveying a message. 

Fresh Meat - Sh Sadler

The piece which won First Place in Advertising Photography was shot to bring attention to modern beauty standards: what do we see as beautiful in our times? Is beauty only skin deep? 

head wrapped in packaging

Thom Browne - Yulia Shur

A surreal scene, like the characters landed on a Utopian Mars, this out-of-the-ordinary campaign was shot for Thom Browne in Gunma, Japan.

Elite Traveler / 2020 Holiday - Nicholas Duers

How does "the Elite" travel? The photo series is a representation of what might be hiding in the bag of a traveller, what they would walk in and accessories they would use. 

Red headphones and accessories

Faith - Din Wu

Belief and faith are explored in this series from the photographer's own point of view. Unable to live without faith means a lot of different things for everyone: either bravery, or helplessness.

Red Level - Salem McBunny

A striking photo from the Tokyo International Photography Awards: placing opposite complimentary coloours next to each other is brave as well as a way to bring a completely new perspective to life. 

Queen Fear - Irene Sekulic

A powerful beauty editorial showing us the darkest emotions of human beings: fear, anger, anxiety, paranoia. Mental health is an important issue we need to face together, without stigmas and prejudice. 

Foodtopia - Yuliy Vasilev

The ideal Utopian fairytale for foodies, Foodtopia inflates food into magnificent sizes and shows how everyday life through the lens of a happy place. 

Queen - Christian Zink

This image is not result of afterwork, but a real model floating 12 meters deep off the coast of Croatia. Her "dress" is a parachute. 

Homage to Picasso's Guernica - Joao Carlos

Shot as the cover image for TAP airlines inflight Magazine UP, the issue was dedicated to the City of Madrid. The makeup was painted directly on the model from award-winning makeup artist Sara Menitra .

New Faces and ... In The Class, Automotive Class - Marcin Majkowski

Showing the new faces of cars in a powerful, almost stark way, to show what we have already seen in a completely different way. 

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Nature never ceases to amaze us - and the same can be said of our photographers as well! During the Tokyo International Foto Awards 2020, the jury panel has the pleasure of receiving staggering amounts of beautiful images captured at the best moments, showing action, life and color. 

Dragon's Eye - James Rushforth

Like a scene from Game of Thrones, winner of Gold in Nature/Aerial demonstrates the vividity of hot springs located on the Icelandic highlands. The area has a particularly high silica content, resulting in some beautifully intricate geothermal formations of polished white geyserite.

A Sheep - Claudia Guido

Just like a fluffy dream, this photograph was captured as a part of promotional work for Italy's Tuscan Organic Tours. 

Quiver Tree at Night - Gigi Williams

Painting some elements of nature often leaves us breathless with wonder - this time, the photographer shone some red light onto a tree in Namibia. 

World of Jellyfish - Katerina Muchova

This almost drawling-like image is a part of the self-taught photographer's series where she captures six different species of jellyfish in a monochromatic scheme. 

Dubai Marina - Carmine Chiriaco'

The photo was taken in Dubai with a DJI Mavic2pro drone. The extraordinary geometry of the architectural designs, the streets, the pier that contrast with the ocean water all come together for a perfect aerial image.

Through the Looking Glass - Veronika Šandorová

Through this very special project, the artist wanted us to see what her precious pets see: "Colourful, playful, full of love, with endless possibilities and a lot of adventures. Simply - DREAMLAND. ⁠"

Glory Night - Younghun Kan

Winner of Gold in the Nature /Sunset category, the photographer captured this magical image in the evening without the sun setting. The northern lights shone in the sky with the sun.

 
 

Frozen Gardens - Olga Volianska

A heartwarming start to this project: during the lockdown, the photographer's husband started to bring her flowers bought from older ladies - however, these flowers picked from gardens started to wilt fast. The solution? To freeze them elongating their life. This is how the photo series was born. 

Sundown Theatre - Bence Máté

"When low sunlight illuminates clouds, dust and water grains in the air, vivid yellow, red, pink and purple tones appear. As this phenomenon is short-lived, each image required careful planning, and sometimes many sessions were needed to capture the images that I had set out to achieve."

New Year Message from BIFA Founder and President, Hossein Farmani:
 
As Founder and President of Farmani Group, it has always been a core part of my life's mission to support worthy causes and those in need. In 1987 I set up the Focus On AIDS foundation, a volunteer-based non-profit organization dedicated to AIDS research, care, and education.
A few years later I started the Asha Karina hospital for children in Mysore India, and since then, my organization has continued its unceasing efforts to support charity organizations and foundations all over the world.
In 2020, as the world faced unprecedented challenges, Farmani Group stepped up in a big way. The International Design Awards gave $15,000 in grants to designers, challenging them to find ways to solve crucial problems related to the Covid-19 Pandemic. We also committed to match all cash prizes given to winners of our photography awards with donations to local charities selected by the winning photographers, in their local communities.
Through these avenues, over $80,000 has been donated in 2020 to organisations and people in need all over the world.
As we say goodbye to 2020 and greet a new year, I know we all hope that in 2021, with the COVID vaccine on its way, we will have a better and happier year ahead of us. But whatever the future brings, Farmani Group is committed to doing our part in bringing awareness to global challenges and helping those in need in whatever way we can.
And we encourage you to take a moment and consider how you, too, can contribute to improve the lives of those in need in your community.
 
We wish each of you a Happy New year!
Hossein Farmani

Charities that received over $ 6,800 through TIFA: 

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Tokyo International Foto Awards 

Announces Winners of 2020 Competition

Selection of 2019 TIFA Winners

Selection of 2020 TIFA Winners (from top to bottom and left to right): Fresh Meat by Sh Sadler, Where is Adam? by Cheraine Collette, Requiem Pour Pianos by Romain Thiery, A Sheep by Claudia Guido, Butterflies in the Stomach by Carlos Gamez de Fransisco, Fishermen of the Mangroves by Les Sharp, Garbage in the Cloud by Piotr Zwarycz.

Los Angeles, February 3rd, 2020 – The Tokyo International Foto Awards is delighted to announce the category winners and finalists in its 2020 Photography Competition for the professional and non professional/student categories.

A stellar international jury of renowned photography experts judged a the entries
from more than 100 countries around the world to finally select these outstanding category winners.

 

Sebastian Copeland was chosen Photographer of the Year for his truly humbling photography book, Antarctica – The Walking Giant, showing us the least explored continent and the danger it faces due to climate change. The book was made under a collaboration with Leonardo DiCaprio to spread awareness of the crisis of global warming.

Antractica – The Walking Giant by Sebastian Copeland

The Discovery of the Year award was given to Diana Cheren Nygren for her work When The Trees Are Gone. Her work explores the concept of city folk searching for a moment of peace in the urban jungle, where nature has been taken over by by human-made buildings.

 

In order to support and honour the outstanding work of both professional and amateur photographers around the world during the COVID-19 crisis, International Photo Awards will match the cash prizes that are awarded this year to the Category Winners with an equal cash donation to the charity of the winning photographer’s choice in their community.

When The Trees Are Gone by Diana Cheren Nygren

Image

Tokyo International Foto Awards 

Professional Category Winners of 2020

ADVERTISING – Fresh Meat by Sh Sadler

ARCHITECTURE – Requiem Pour Pianos by Romain Thiery

BOOK – Antarctica – The Walking Giant by Sebastian Copeland

EDITORIAL – Women Protesting Over Abortion Ban in Poland by Bartosz Mateńko

EVENTS – Beneath the Surface of Competitive Seadiving by Kohei Ueno

FINE ART – Fishermen of the Mangroves by Les Sharp

NATURE – A Sheep by Claudia Guido

PEOPLE – A Painful Necessity by Gabriele Micalizzi

PORTFOLIO – Butterflies in the Stomach by Carlos Gamez de Fransisco

SCIENCE – Viveria by Ela Kurowska

I'm an image

Women Protesting Over Abortion Ban in Poland by Bartosz Mateńko

Image

Tokyo International Foto Awards 

Student/ Non-Professional Category Winners of 2020

I'm an image

New Faces and … In The Class, Automotive Class by Marcin Majkowski

ADVERTISING – New Faces and … In The Class, Automotive Class by Marcin Majkowski

ARCHITECTURE – Snake’S Zaha by Roberto Corinaldesi

BOOK – The Consolation of Dew by Joel Pulliam

EDITORIAL – Hong Kong Conflict by Wei Fu

EVENTS – Timoncap 2019 by Sergio Ferreira Ruiz

FINE ART – Urban Tetris by Mariyan Atanasov

NATURE – Ribbon Dance by Richard Li

PEOPLE – Promised Land by Michal Konrad

PORTFOLIO – When the Trees are Gone by Diana Cheren Nygren

SCIENCE – Pathology Atlas by Oltea Sampetrean

While colours tickle our senses in a more intensive way, monochrome images have a certain powerful presence to them. Last year, we received a large number of black and white photos at the Tokyo International Foto Awards - we chose our ten favourite works. 

Balenciaga Summer 2019 Campaign by Robert Yager - Gold in Advertising/Fashion, 1st Place winner in Advertising

Inspired by Yager's black and white gang series from the 1990's, Balenciaga asked the photographer to shoot their fashions in the same gritty way, with models in Upstate New York, for their Summer 2019 worldwide campaign. It was November and a snow storm occurred. Balenciaga agreed to have snow in the background at this time of Climate Change.

M.I.T by Louis-Philippe Provost - Silver in Architecture/Buildings

This photograph captures the stark facade of the The Ray and Maria Stata Center otherwise called Building 32, an academic complex designed by Pritzker Prize winner Frank Gehry for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Silent Kingdom, A World Beneath The Waves. by Christian Vizl - Gold in Book/Nature, 1st Place winner in Book

This truly stunning book was compiled by award-winning photographer Christian Vizl, who uses a masterful control of light and shadow to portray the creatures of the sea as they are rarely seen below the waves. Capturing a range of undersea scenes and moods—from the ferocity of sharks to the playful dance of dolphins—Vizl turns aquatic creatures and marine seascapes into visions of sublime grace and beauty suspended in time and space.

 

Ewa by Patrizia Burra - Bronze in Advertising/Fashion

This experimental shot was fuelled by the photographer's vision to not only capture a reproduced image of the world, but to create art with a factor of restlessness and commemorate it. 

Mud People Festival by Jophel Botero Ybiosa - Gold in Events/Other, 2nd Place winner in Events

The huge crowd in this image shows the Mud People Festival in Nueva Ecija, Philippines. Devotees wear dried banana leaves and cover themselves with mud while offering prayer or paying homage to Saint John the Baptist. According to a local legend, the Japanese soldiers were about to execute the villagers of Aliaga during World War II. But in the midst of downpour, Japanese soldiers suddenly changed their minds. Afterwards, to celebrate, the villagers celebrated by rolling around in the mud. 

Different Kinkahuji Temple by Hsiaohsin Chen - Bronze in Architecture/Buildings

Built in 1397, the Kinkahuji temple is a very important cultural symbol of Kyoto, Japan. It is not only a world cultural heritage but is also represented in the literary work of the Golden Pavilion by Yukio Mishima, the literary giant of Japan. It is an important attraction for visitors at the same time. 

 
 

The Damned of The Earth by Julien De Wilde - Gold in People/Portrait, 1st Place winner in People

This powerful photo series introduces us to the workers who spend their days in the rice fields. Under a burning sun and feet in the mud, for hours, with their faces and bodies covered, it almost seems like they have no identity. It begs the questions: who are they? How old? According to the photographer, it is important to be thankful to them for their sacrifice so that other may have rice on their plate. 

Pacifica by Susanna Patras - Gold in Fine Art/Landscape

The artist's goal was to explore the ideas of solitude, time, natural beauty and grandeur in these images, through nature. The rocky structures around the US Pacific coast, called monoliths, stretch from the US border with Mexico into Canada. Generated by volcanic activity, the monoliths are oftentimes surrounded by fog, in a mysterious, dramatic and otherworldly atmosphere.

 

Taekwondo North Korea Style by Alain Schroeder - Gold in Editorial/sports

Capturing such perfect coordination is truly an accomplishment: Korea’s national martial art Taekwondo ("way of kick and fist") is taught in every school as a part of the daily sports and health routine. After 50 years of existence, the art of kicks has 60 million practitioners in more than 120 countries and Taekwondo became a medal sport at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games.

 

Fine art can be anything we want it to be - from dreamlike landscapes to mysterious still life and surrealistic portraits, it shows us the inside workings of the photographer's imagination. No wonder it is a beloved category at the Tokyo International Foto Awards! Let us guide you through the maze of the 2019 TIFA photographers' creativity.

Who Stole My Head by Hardijanto Budiman - Second Place in Fine Art 

This striking series of photographs represent an experiment for the artist: how to demonstrate a girl who has been frustrated and feels like she lost her head.

Rainbow Wedding Dress by Chiyen Chien - Bronze in Fine Art / Special Effects

An ambitious project: the wedding dress is handmade from 1800 napkins. For the veil, the photographer used smoke to create a dreamy feeling. 

Poem For Autumn by Sungdong Choi - Bronze in Fine Art / Landscape

A landscape of oriental ink painting style on a foggy, calm morning, shot by the photographer in South Korea. 

 

Waiting For The Tide to Turn by Gary Sheridan - Bronze in Fine Art / Other

The ongoing photo series explores a large scale of emotions. The images allude to a spectrum of thoughts and feelings from apathy and subservience to enlightenment and rebellion. The series envisages the realization that individualism is the weakness and only as a collective can they begin to turn the tide. 

Shadows by Samuel Feron - Silver in Fine Art / Landscape

In this misty and ominous series of outstanding shots, the photographer shows us his personal feelings of the Yellow Mountain in China.

The Light Within by Tom Jacobi - Gold in Fine Art/Nudes

Tom Jacobi's works are an homage to nature and planet Earth and the evolvement of the human soul. Ass we can see, vivid colours are mostly excluded from his work, but he finds countless nuances within the spectra of grey, white and bronze to form a cosmos, which he himself describes as an "achromatic colour world". 

Accelerated Intimacy. by Sarah Choo Jing - Silver in Fine Art / Moving Images

Accelerated Intimacy considers questions about sight, memory and staging in relation to time. A parallel to her previous methods of compositing and reconstructing documented images; Choo re-presents fragments through time, reconstructing a potential narrative surrounding each character. There is no resolution offered to these stories, they are kept to be ongoing. 

In Harmony-Sparkle- by Keiichiro Muramatsu - Silver in Fine Art / Other

For the artist, arranging flowers is a relationship with nature and an act of creating harmony. The aim is to project a person’s appearance and trace onto the flowers. 

A Seat At The Table by Justin Dingwall - Silver in Fine Art/Portrait

These images' protagonist, who has vitiligo Moostapha Saidi, and the photographer aim to start conversations about preconceived ideas and perceptions based on appearance and how what we see affects what we think. As in previous bodies of work, the artist hopes to highlight beauty in difference. 

Heartbreak by Felix Hernandez Rodriguez - Silver in Fine Art/Special Effects

In this touching shot, the photographer depicts the heartbreak he feels for what he is leaving behind for his son. Nature is beautiful, it's amazing, and we all are part of it... But with our actions we are destroying it. The diorama was built (rocks, mountains, trees, grass, etc.) using scale model figures. 

The deadline of the Tokyo International Foto Awards has been extended to October 31st, 2020 - submit your works now!

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