SONY WORLD PHOTOGRAPHY AWARDS: PROFESSIONAL COMPETITION, FINALISTS & SHORTLISTS 

  • The Sony World Photography Awards announces the finalists and shortlists of the 2025 Professional competition 
  • Photographic projects were recognised for technical mastery and an original approach to narrative 
  • Photographer of the Year to be announced on 16 April at a special gala ceremony in London 
  • 2025 exhibition opens at Somerset House from 17 April - 5 May 2025 

 

The Sony World Photography Awards reveals today the 30 finalists and shortlisted photographers in the 2025 Professional competition. Now in its 18th year, the Professional competition rewards outstanding series of work both for their compelling approach to narrative and for their photographic execution. ​ 

 

Across this year’s competitions, over 419,000 images from over 200 countries and territories were submitted to the Awards. ​ 

 

The 10 category winners will be chosen from the 30 finalists and announced at a special ceremony in London on 16 April. The recipient of the prestigious Photographer of the Year title is chosen from the category winners and announced on the same night. In addition to receiving a $25,000 (USD) cash prize and a range of Sony digital imaging equipment, the Photographer of the Year is offered the opportunity to show their work in a solo presentation at next year’s Sony World Photography Awards London exhibition. ​ 

 

A new prize element is additionally introduced for this year’s Professional competition; the 10 category winners are invited to London for a day of tailored sessions with leading industry figures. From a range of commercial and institutional backgrounds, these experts offer the photographers specialised guidance on ways to continue to widen their platform and to find new opportunities to showcase their work. 

 

Underscoring the creativity and dynamism of Japan’s contemporary photography scene, the 2025 Awards also marks the first edition of the Japan Professional Award, which recognises a winner and shortlist of striking series by Japanese photographers from the Professional competition. 

 

A selection of works by finalists and shortlisted photographers is first on view as part of the Sony World Photography Awards 2025 exhibition at Somerset House from 17 April - 5 May 2025, and will thereafter travel to other locations. 

 

Commenting on behalf of the jury, Monica Allende, Chair of the Jury, says: ‘We were so impressed by the strength and variety of the works submitted to the Sony World Photography Awards 2025. It is always a real challenge to select the shortlists and finalists, and as a jury we found the wider entries no less vital and inspiring.  

 

On behalf of the jury I would like to congratulate the shortlist and finalists of the Professional competition. Across their projects, these photographers show great originality and clarity of vision, bringing prescient stories to the fore. From narratives of community-building, to explorations of collective memory, to empowering stories of people challenging conventions, these works offer a diversity of perspectives on our moment in history. I would like to extend my thanks to all of the jury for their careful deliberations and choices this year.’ 

 

The three finalist projects per category of the Sony World Photography Awards 2025 Professional competition are: 

 

ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN 

Twilight in San Ignacio by Andre Tezza (Brazil) explores the resilience of the vernacular architecture of Belize, looking at homes built to withstand the challenging tropical climate. LIGHT/MASS by Owen Davies (United Kingdom) explores seemingly ‘alien’ urban landscapes in the United States, focusing on monumental buildings with atypical geometries. Ulana Switucha’s (Canada) Tokyo Toilet Project documents an initiative involving the construction of modern public restrooms designed by leading architects. ​ 

 

CREATIVE 

In I Am Here for You, Irina Shkoda (Ukraine) reflects on dynamics of hospitality, both given and received, drawing on her own experience as a refugee. In Reclaiming the Truth, Julio Etchart & Holly Birtles (United Kingdom) look closely at institutional artefact collections and curation through a postcolonial lens. Elsewhere, Rhiannon Adam (United Kingdom) tells a personal story of the dearMoon mission which she was set to participate in, responding to the ways in which its cancellation disrupted her life and her work. ​ 

 

DOCUMENTARY PROJECTS 

Alex Bex’s (France) series Memories of Dust explores the visual vocabulary of the cowboy, to consider new ways of presenting this archetype of masculinity. Florence Goupil’s (Peru) series The Whisper of Maize examines the pivotal role of maize in Latin American traditions, not only as a staple food but as a medium of cultural and religious expression. Toby Binder (Germany) documents the deep divides shaping social life in Belfast, Northern Ireland, through the lives of young people born after the Good Friday agreement. ​ ​ 

 

ENVIRONMENT 

Cristóbal Olivares (Chile) charts the impact of light pollution on the astronomical teams observing the night sky of the Atacama Desert. Maria Portaluppi’s (Ecuador) project looks at conservation in Guayanquil; through tender portraits of the animals in their care, she highlights the work done by the Sacha Rescue Foundation. In Alquimia Textil, Nicolás Garrido Huguet (Peru) collaborates with researcher and fashion designer María Lucía Muñoz to portray traditional textile dyeing techniques practiced by artisans of Pumaqwasin in Chinchero, Cusco, with light bleeds on the photographs visually and texturally reflective of the dye seeping into cloth. ​ 

 

LANDSCAPE 

In Apocalypse, Lalo de Almeida (Brazil) maps out the devastation caused by drought, deforestation and wildfires across Brazil in 2024, its hottest year on record. Mischa Lluch’s (Spain) series Fading evokes the loneliness and disconnection beneath the surface of contemporary American suburbia, creating images of an uncanny stillness. Seido Kino (Japan) carefully combines archival imagery with contemporary Japanese landscapes, rolling back the surface of the contemporary image to reveal how towns and villages have evolved with the passage of time, and the ways that today’s challenges can be connected to the past. 

 

PERSPECTIVES 

Giovanni Capriotti (Italy) explores Canadian history through the lens of its First Nations communities, working with the guidance of elders and people living with intergenerational trauma. Laura Pannack (United Kingdom) captures the daily dangers and obstacles that the children face on their journey home from school in the gang-governed Cape Flats area of Cape Town. Ashes of the Arabian’s Pearl by Valentin Valette (France) observes the societal changes resulting from economic growth in the Sultanate of Oman, considering the manual labourers and the entrepreneurs pushing the economy forward. ​ 

 

PORTRAITURE 

Gui Christ’s (Brazil) project M’kumba illustrates the resilience of Afro-Brazilian communities in the face of local religious intolerance, celebrating the ways in which their spirituality and religious identity is expressed. Raúl Belinchón (Spain) photographs the young volunteers whose efforts helped to clean the houses, clear the streets, and deliver life-saving supplies during the flooding in the Valencia region in autumn 2024. Tom Franks’s (United Kingdom) series The Second offers an insight into the complex relationship between gun owners and their firearms in the United States, using their personal testimonies to represent this cultural phenomenon. ​ 

 

SPORT 

Antonio López Díaz (Spain) tells the story of aspiring gymnasts from Chad, whose determination earned them scholarships, and eventually led them to compete for a spot in the 2024 Olympic Games. Chantal Pinzi’s (Italy) Shred the Patriarchy celebrates the women in India who have subverted gender stereotypes and broken barriers by practicing skateboarding. Michael Dunn (Bolivia) looks at a typical Monday for two women passionate about golf; every week they leave their usual work roles to play, wearing the traditional clothing of the Bolivian chola. ​ 

 

STILL LIFE 

Alessandro Gandolfi (Italy) uses still life photographs to illustrate the fragile ecosystem of the Wadden Sea, an intertidal zone of the North Sea, showing its unique importance in maintaining ecosustainability in Europe. K M Asad (Bangladesh) depicts the murals installed by Sheikh Hasina during her rule, documenting the ways in which these symbols of political power have been erased and dismantled following her exile in 2024. Peter Franck’s (Germany) Still Waiting is suggestive of the liminal spaces between events - the thresholds ‘where time seems to stretch.’ 

 

WILDLIFE & NATURE 

Kevin Shi (United States) highlights the ways in which polar bears and humans are living in ever-close proximity in the town of Churchill, Canada. Pascal Beaudenon’s (France) painterly images show a herd of musk ox, tracing their behaviours as they group together closely to face the harsh winter. Zed Nelson’s (United Kingdom) Anthropocene Illusion is a long-term project documenting the ways in which humans mediate their relationship with the natural world, creating artificial experiences of nature in the face of a rapidly changing climate and depleting biodiversity. ​ 

 

JAPAN PROFESSIONAL AWARD 

The new Japan Professional Award recognises a winner and shortlist of Japanese photographers who entered outstanding series into the Professional competition. The inaugural winner of the Japan Professional Award is Noriko Hayashi for her project Life at the Crossroads: Midwives in Afghanistan, documenting the arduous work and the resilience of Afghan midwives operating under the Taliban regime. In addition to her work being shown at the London exhibition and in the annual book, Noriko Hayashi is awarded Sony digital imaging equipment and the opportunity to present her work at the Sony Imaging Gallery Ginza in Tokyo later this year. The shortlisted photographers are Miku Yokoyama (Architecture & Design), Seido Kino (Landscape), Shinya Masuda (Still Life) and Shunta Kimura (Environment). ​ 

 

 

PROFESSIONAL COMPETITION FINALISTS AND SHORTLIST 

 

 

ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN 

Finalists 

Andre Tezza, Brazil 

Owen Davies, United Kingdom 

Ulana Switucha, Canada 

Shortlist 

Alejandro Fernández-Llamazares Vidal, Spain 

Maciej Leszczynski, Poland 

Márton Mogyorósy, Hungary 

Miku Yokoyama, Japan 

Peter Franck, Germany 

Yu Ting Lei, China Mainland 

CREATIVE 

Finalists 

Irina Shkoda, Ukraine 

Julio Etchart & Holly Birtles, United Kingdom 

Rhiannon Adam, United Kingdom 

Shortlist 

Alice Poyzer, United Kingdom 

Carolina Krieger, Brazil 

Giorgia Lisi, Italy 

Mariana Greif, Uruguay 

Valentina Fusco, Italy 

Yinna Higuera, Colombia 

DOCUMENTARY PROJECTS 

Finalists 

Alex Bex, France 

Florence Goupil, Peru 

Toby Binder, Germany 

Shortlist 

Alessandro Grassani, Italy 

Alfredo Bosco, Italy 

Caroline Gutman, United States 

Da Yang, China Mainland 

Giovanni de Mojana, Italy 

Jodi Windvogel, South Africa 

Noriko Hayashi, Japan 

ENVIRONMENT 

Finalists 

Cristóbal Olivares, Chile 

Maria Portaluppi, Ecuador 

Nicolás Garrido Huguet, Peru 

Shortlist 

Daniele Vita, Italy 

Kasia Strek, Poland 

Matteo Bastianelli, Italy 

Per-Anders Pettersson, Sweden 

Shunta Kimura, Japan 

Skander Khlif, Tunisia 

LANDSCAPE 

Finalists 

Lalo de Almeida, Brazil 

Mischa Lluch, Spain 

Seido Kino, Japan 

Shortlist 

Dudu Roth, Israel 

Francisco Gonzalez Camacho, Spain 

Gunnar Knechtel, Germany 

Javi Parejo, Spain 

Kazuaki Koseki, Japan 

Lorenzo Poli, Italy 

Masood Talebi, Islamic Republic of Iran 

PERSPECTIVES 

Finalists 

Giovanni Capriotti, Italy 

Laura Pannack, United Kingdom 

Valentin Valette, France 

Shortlist 

Bárbara Monteiro, Portugal 

Carlos Folgoso Sueiro, Spain 

Jed Bacason, Philippines 

Lea Greub, Germany 

Lina Czerny, Germany 

Lorraine Turci, France 

Mauricio Holc, Argentina 

PORTRAITURE 

Finalists 

Gui Christ, Brazil 

Raúl Belinchón, Spain 

Tom Franks, United Kingdom 

Shortlist 

Alena Grom, Ukraine 

Cletus Nelson Nwadike, Sweden 

Constance Jaeggi O'Connor, Switzerland 

Ivan Ryaskov, Kazakhstan 

Jean-Marc Caimi & Valentina Piccinni, Italy 

Niccolò Rastrelli, Italy 

Stas Ginzburg, United States 

SPORT 

Finalists 

Antonio López Díaz, Spain 

Chantal Pinzi, Italy 

Michael Dunn, Bolivia 

Shortlist 

Matthew Joseph, United Kingdom 

Mihaela Ivanova, Bulgaria 

Robin Tutenges, France 

Svenja Wiese, Germany 

Tanara Stuermer, Brazil 

STILL LIFE 

Finalists 

Alessandro Gandolfi, Italy 

K M Asad, Bangladesh 

Peter Franck, Germany 

Shortlist 

Amanda Harman, United Kingdom 

Elaine Duigenan, United Kingdom 

Li Sun, China Mainland 

Miriam Bräutigam, Germany 

Oded Wagenstein, Israel 

Rui Caria, Portugal 

Shinya Masuda, Japan 

WILDLIFE & NATURE 

Finalists 

Kevin Shi, United States 

Pascal Beaudenon, France 

Zed Nelson, United Kingdom 

Shortlist 

Amit Eshel, Israel 

Brent Stirton, South Africa 

Efrain Sueldo, United States 

James Wylie, United Kingdom 

Marielle van Uitert, Netherlands 

Melina Schildberg, Germany 

Thomas Nicolon, France 

 

 

 

JAPAN PROFESSIONAL AWARD WINNER AND SHORTLIST 

 

Winner 

Noriko Hayashi 

Shortlist 

Miku Yokoyama 

Seido Kino 

Shinya Masuda 

Shunta Kimura 

 

NOTES TO EDITORS

 

SONY WORLD PHOTOGRAPHY AWARDS 

Produced by the World Photography Organisation, the internationally acclaimed Sony World Photography Awards is one of the most important fixtures in the global photographic calendar. Now in its 18th year, the free-to-enter Awards are a global voice for photography and provide a vital insight into contemporary photography today. For both established and emerging artists, the Awards offer world-class opportunities for exposure of their work. The Awards additionally recognise the world’s most influential artists working in the medium through the Outstanding Contribution to Photography award; the acclaimed photographer Susan Meiselas is the 2025 recipient of this award, joining a distinguished list of iconic names including William Eggleston (2013), Mary Ellen Mark (2014), Martin Parr (2017), Graciela Iturbide (2021), Edward Burtynsky (2022) and Sebastião Salgado (2024). The Awards showcase the works of winning and shortlisted photographers at a prestigious annual exhibition at Somerset House, Londonworldphoto.org/exhibition  

 

WORLD PHOTOGRAPHY ORGANISATION ​ 

World Photography Organisation is a leading global platform dedicated to the development and advancement of photographic culture. Its programming and competition initiatives provide valuable opportunities for artists working in photography and help broaden the conversation around their work. The Sony World Photography Awards is World Photography Organisation’s principal programme. Established in 2007, it is one of the world’s biggest and most prestigious photography competitions; celebrating the work of leading and emerging practitioners and attracting tens of thousands of visitors annually to its exhibitions worldwide. World Photography Organisation is the photography strand of Creo, which initiates events and programming across three sectors: photography, film and contemporary art. worldphoto.org 

 

CREO 

Creo initiates and organises events and programming across three key strands: photography, film and contemporary art. Established in 2007 as World Photography Organisation, Creo has since grown in scope, furthering its mission of developing meaningful opportunities for creatives and expanding the reach of its cultural activities. Today, its flagship projects include the Sony World Photography Awards, Sony Future Filmmaker Awards, PHOTOFAIRS and Photo London. Working in partnership with Angus Montgomery Arts, Creo helps deliver the group’s ventures, comprising some of the world’s leading art fairs. Taking its name from the Latin for ‘I create’, it is in this spirit that Creo sets out to empower and give agency to creative voices. creoarts.com ​ 

 

SONY CORPORATION 

Sony Corporation is a wholly owned subsidiary of Sony Group Corporation and is responsible for the Entertainment, Technology & Services (ET&S) business. With the mission to “create the future of entertainment through the power of technology together with creators,” we aim to continue to deliver Kando* to people around the world. For more information, visit: sony.net 

*Kando is a Japanese word that roughly translates to the sense of awe and emotion you feel when experiencing something beautiful and amazing for the first time. 

 

SONY WORLD PHOTOGRAPHY AWARDS 2025 BOOK 

 

The hardback exhibition book will be available to purchase at the exhibition shop in Somerset House and is available to pre-order on shop.worldphoto.org (£24.99). ​ 

 

This collectible hardcover book celebrates remarkable photographs from the past year and delves into the compelling stories, both big and small, that inspired them. Enjoy award-winning images of all styles, genres and topics and immerse yourself in the unique perspectives of photographers from around the world as you look through its pages. Alongside the acclaimed images, readers will also be able to enjoy an essay dedicated to this year’s Outstanding Contribution to Photography recipient Susan Meiselas. 

 

 

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