The Competition
Pink Lady® Food Photographer of the Year is inspired by the proliferation of wonderful food photography in a huge variety of applications. From eye-catching advertising hoardings, to sumptuous editorial features, from tempting food packaging to daily blogs. The Awards celebrate this magnificent diversity in what is truly, the stuff of life.
The Awards seek to single out not only technical skill, but originality of treatment and a real sense of connection with the subject matter whatever it may be. Whether simply an apple on a plate, a cake of spun sugar, a baker covered in flour at four in the morning, or a pot simmering on an open fire in the African bush.
We are looking for professional and amateur alike, in our search for the very best depictions of this marvellously varied subject of food, which unites us all.
Prizes
The overall winner of the title Pink Lady® Food Photographer of the Year 2012 will receive £5000 and a trophy.
Category winners will receive a trophy and voucher for camera equipment.
Winners of the three Young category age-groups will receive £100 each.
An evening reception to announce the winners will be held in April 2012 at the world-renowned Mall Galleries in London, SW1. The winners of each category and the runners up will have their work shown in an exhibition open to the public from Wednesday 25th until Saturday 28th April 2012.
Categories
There are lots of categories in this competition to challenge your creativity, including Cream of the Crop, Food in the Street, Food in the Field, Food and its Place, Food for Sale, The Philip Harben Award for Food in Action, Food Portraiture, Young (under 18s) and an An Apple a Day.
Proceeds from the 'Apple a Day' category are in support of Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity. Regd. charity no. 235825.
For further information and to enter this competition please visit the Pink Lady Food Photographer of the Year Competition Website.
Complies with the Bill of Rights
This competition meets all the standards set out in
the Bill of Rights For Artists
Competitions which meet all the standards set out in the Bill of Rights For Artists do not do any of the following -
- claim copyright
- claim exclusive use
- seek waiving of moral rights
- fail to give a credit for all free usage
- add, alter, or remove metadata from submissions
- seek usage rights other than for promoting the contest and no other purpose. Note that a book, posters, cards, or a calendar are seen as legitimate ways of promoting the contest and defraying costs
- seek free usage rights in excess of 3 years
- use the submissions commercially without the entrant's agreement, and such commercial usage is to be subject to a freely negotiated license independently of the competition.
- make it a condition of winning that an entrant must sign a commercial usage agreement
- fail to publish all documents on the competition website that an entrant may have to sign
- fail to name the judges for this or last year's competition
- fail to explicitly state all the organisations who will acquire rights to the submissions
- set a closing date more than 18 months after the contest launch date
- fail to make clear statements of rights claimed and how submissions are used.
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Report created on 25/11/2011 : 14:07:52