2011 Photographer of the Year
2011 Photographer of the Year CLICK PHOTO FOR GALLERY
Winning photographer ‘pushing photojournalism forward’
Pictures of the Year International announcedNoor’s Yuri Kozyrev as the 2011 photographer of the year in the freelance/agency category last week. His winning image shows rebels running for cover on the road between Benghazi and Tripoli as Libyan forces dropped bombs.
“They were just boys curious to be on the frontline. Most didn’t even have weapons,” Kozyrev says of the subjects in the photo, taken last March for TIME magazine. (TIME is owned by CNN’s parent company, Time Warner.)
As the rebels scrambled to find cover in the flat desert, Kozyrev turned to capture this moment (image No. 7).
“It was just a moment I saw, then I tried to find a place to hide,” said the Russian photographer. “I am a human being like anyone else; I can be scared, but it’s all about the moment.”
While Kozyrev never imagined himself covering conflicts across the globe, he’s able to express himself through his photographs, he said. His brother, a journalist, inspired him to begin shooting. He never considered becoming a writer like his brother but found instead that photography was natural for him.
Plus, he added, it allows him to travel and meet new people. On assignments, he stays with locals, which is a “great part of the job,” he said. “You need to be on the ground, staying with people, understanding what they’re going through.”
“There is great heart and clarity in Yuri’s work,” TIME’s director of photography Kira Pollack said in an e-mail. “Yuri’s pictures are cinematic. They are alive. There is a tremendous energy to his frames.” And it sets him apart from other photographers, she said.
Photojournalism is a tough career, between trying to be in the right place at the right time and competing with television to produce fresh scenes. But Kozyrev believes it still holds importance.
“Our job is to remind the people in Paris and New York with cappuccinos that some people are suffering at the same time. … An ordinary person might only spend one and a half seconds looking at the picture, but to get the picture, sometimes people sacrifice their life.”
Kozyrev considers it as an incredible privilege to witness and cover world events. And he does an award-winning job.
“There is a fair amount of photojournalism that goes toward darkness and mood,” TIME’s Pollack said. “Yuri’s pictures do the opposite. … Yuri Kozyrev is an example of a photographer who is pushing photojournalism forward through his signature style.”
– Elizabeth I. Johnson, CNN
Comet’s Death by Sun Photographed for First Time
The death of a comet that plunged into the sun was captured on camera this month for the first time in history, scientists say. READ MOREThe Evidence
Extraordinary aerial footage of uncontacted Amazon tribe released
This unique film shows uncontacted Indians on the Brazil-Peru border in never-seen-before detail. It is the first-ever aerial footage of an uncontacted community. The footage was filmed by the BBC in collaboration with the Brazilian government, for the new BBC 1 ‘Human Planet’ series. Click For More
Kodak: Plugged In – We Had No Idea
Kodak: Plugged In – We Had No Idea.
Editor’s Note: Steve Sasson, the inventor of the digital camera, will be inducted today into theConsumer Electronics Hall of Fame in San Diego, CA.
In December of 1975, after a year of piecing together a bunch of new technology in a back lab at the Elmgrove Plant in Rochester, we were ready to try it. “It” being a rather odd-looking collection of digital circuits that we desperately tried to convince ourselves was a portable camera. It had a lens that we took from a used parts bin from the Super 8 movie camera production line downstairs from our little lab on the second floor in Bldg 4. On the side of our portable contraption, we shoehorned in a portable digital cassette instrumentation recorder. Add to that 16 nickel cadmium batteries, a highly temperamental new type of CCD imaging area array, an a/d converter implementation stolen from a digital voltmeter application, several dozen digital and analog circuits all wired together on approximately half a dozen circuit boards, and you have our interpretation of what a portable all electronic still camera might look like.
A Light on the People of Western Sahara
When the Irish-born photographer Andrew McConnell saw some images from his project “The Last Colony” displayed side by side for the first time earlier this week, even he was surprised by the strength in numbers.
While the individual images — stark, harshly lit portraits of the Sahrawi people from Western Sahara — are stunning in themselves, collectively, their impact grows. READ MORE
At the Salton Sea, Something Like Nostalgia
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“You’re looking at a remarkable idea,” says an eager voice on an archival audio track. “An idea that has intrigued, and attracted, and literally thrilled thousands upon thousands of men, women and children. This is the story of the miracle sea in the desert.”
TRAVEL PHOTOGRAPHY – QUICK TIPS FOR SUCCESS
TRAVEL PHOTOGRAPHY – QUICK TIPS FOR SUCCESS
Posted by: Ryan // I AM NIKON – March 24, 2011– Category: D-SLR, Pro Photographers, Tips
Summer, or spring at least, is just around the corner – and our thoughts are already turning to holidays. For many people, this means travel… which also means more photography!
Ensuring you get the best possible results from your travel photography is about much more than having the right equipment and finding the right location. We caught up with internationally renowned and award-winning documentary and travel photographer, Martin Edström, who shared some tips on what to consider when taking photos abroad. READ MORE
Reuters Full Focus
Editor’s choice
4 Times Journalists Held Captive in Libya Faced Days of Brutality
TYLER HICKS The New York Times photographer near the front line during a pause in the fighting on March 11 in Ras Lanuf, Libya. Four days later, he and three other Times journalists were taken captive by government soldiers.
By ANTHONY SHADID, LYNSEY ADDARIO, STEPHEN FARRELL and TYLER HICKS
Published: March 22, 2011
This article is by Anthony Shadid, Lynsey Addario, Stephen Farrell and Tyler Hicks.
As the four of us headed toward the eastern gate of Ajdabiya, the front line of a desperate rebel stand against the advancing forces of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, a car pulled up alongside. READ MORE
Improve your vacation snapshots
Improve your vacation snapshots.
This weekend, photographers, writers and editors from The Times will be present at the Los Angeles Times Travel & Adventure Show at the L.A. Convention Center.





