When discussing , the conversation must begin in Amsterdam at the World Press Photo contest. The 2017 contest (honoring work from 2016) awarded its highest honor to Burhan Ozbilici for his Associated Press image, "Assassination of Andrei Karlov."
The most prestigious photography competitions in 2017 honored images that balanced high technical execution with intense emotional gravity. 1. World Press Photo of the Year: Burhan Özbilici : "An Assassination in Turkey".
Although not titled "The Photographer," Camera Obscura is a 95-minute American horror film starring a photographer, making it an essential entry for fans of the genre. It centers on Jack Zeller (Christopher Denham), a war photographer with PTSD who returns home and receives an antique camera. He soon discovers that the pictures he takes with it predict grisly murders before they happen. Jack begins killing people himself, staging the crime scenes to match his photos, leading to a violent and mental unraveling reminiscent of films like The Shining and Peeping Tom . the photographer 2017 best
: Released a collection of the best photos from its photographers , covering events like Hurricane Maria and the preparation for the McGregor vs. Mayweather fight. The New York Times
Thoughts On Being A Good Photographer From Souvid Datta Incident When discussing , the conversation must begin in
The Photographer 2017, also known as the Magnum Photos Photographer of the Year, was awarded to Christoph Kümmerer. However, I couldn't find a notable photographer by that name who received the best photographer award in 2017.
Davey won the Renaissance Award at the 2017 Head On Photo Festival, solidifying her as a top contender for the best photographer of that year. World Press Photo of the Year: Burhan Özbilici
If you weren't behind the lens, 2017 offered incredible books and films to study the craft.
While Buyckx took the top professional title, 2017 featured several other standout winners:
Ironically, in the street/candid genre was a man who died in 2013: Saul Leiter . Why 2017? Because 2017 saw the blockbuster publication of "Saul Leiter: All About Light" and a massive retrospective at the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson in Paris.
: Recognized for her extensive and compassionate coverage of the Rohingya refugee crisis in Bangladesh, bringing global attention to one of the year's most significant humanitarian disasters. Show more