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Friday, April 27, 2012

കാഴ്ചയിലെ കുളിരും കണ്ണീരും


ലോകപ്രശസ്തങ്ങളായ ഫോട്ടോഗ്രാഫി മല്‍സരത്തില്‍ സമ്മാനിതമായ ചിത്രങ്ങള്‍ . 2011-ല്‍ വേള്‍ഡ് പ്രസ് ഫോട്ടോ അസ്സോസിയേഷന്‍ , നാഷണല്‍ ജിയോഗ്രാഫിക്, ബ്രിട്ടീഷ് വൈല്‍ഡ് ലൈഫ്, സോണി വേള്‍ഡ്, നിക്കോണ്‍ എന്നിവ നടത്തിയ ഫോട്ടോഗ്രാഫി മല്‍സരത്തില്‍ ഒന്നാമതെത്തിയ ചിത്രങ്ങള്‍ ഇവിടെ കാണാം.

വേള്‍ഡ് പ്രസ് ഫോട്ടോ വിന്നേര്‍സ് 2011

1955-ല്‍ നെതര്‍ലാന്റിലെ ആസ്റ്റര്‍ഡാമില്‍ രൂപം കൊണ്ട സ്വതന്ത്രസംഘടനയാണ് വേള്‍ഡ് പ്രസ് ഫോട്ടോ അസ്സോസിയേഷന്‍ . ലോകത്തിലെ ഏറ്റവും പ്രശ്‌സവും വിപുലവുമായതാണ് വേള്‍ഡ് പ്രസ് ഫോട്ടോ അസ്സോസിയേഷന്‍ നടത്തുന്ന വര്‍ഷാന്തമല്‍സരം. വിവിധവിഭാഗങ്ങളില്‍ ഒന്നാം സ്ഥാനം നേടിയ ചിത്രങ്ങള്‍ ചുവടെ.

Portraits: Singles
Bibi Aisha, 18, was disfigured as retribution for fleeing her husband's house in Oruzgan province, in the center of Afghanistan. At the age of 12, Aisha and her younger sister had been given to the family of a Taliban fighter under a Pashtun tribal custom for settling disputes. When she reached puberty she was married to him, but she later returned to her parents' home, complaining of violent treatment by her in-laws. Men arrived there one night demanding that she be handed over to be punished for running away. Aisha was taken to a mountain clearing, where, at the orders of a Taliban commander, she was held down and had first her ears sliced off, then her nose. In local culture, a man who has been shamed by his wife is said to have lost his nose, and this is seen as punishment in return. Aisha was abandoned, but later rescued and taken to a shelter in Kabul run by the aid organization Women for Afghan Women, where she was given treatment and psychological help. After time in the refuge, she was taken to America to receive further counseling and reconstructive surgery. Photographer : Jodi Bieber


Portraits:Stories – The Last Colony

Minatu Lanabas Suidat, aged 25, in an area controlled by Polisario. The Saharawi people of Western Sahara have been involved in a decades-long dispute for independence, in land controlled by Morocco along the border with Algeria. A former Spanish colony, Western Sahara is Africa's last open file at the United Nations Decolonization Committee. Morocco invaded the territory in 1975, forcing the Spanish to withdraw. Spain divided the land between Morocco and Mauritania. A Saharawi rebel group, the Polisario Front, which had formed earlier to fight the Spanish, began a guerilla war against the new occupiers, with the backing of Algeria, and forced the withdrawal of Mauritania in 1979. In the 1980s, Morocco built a 2,700-kilometer-long sand barrier and planted it with mines, dividing Western Sahara in two. Most Saharawi live in the inland desert behind this barrier, or in refugee camps in Algeria.
Photographer: Andrew McConnell


People in the News: Singles – Kashmir Intifada

The sister of Feroz Ahmad Malik wails as she clings to the bed carrying his body, at his funeral in Palhalan, near the city of Srinagar, in Indian-administered Kashmir. Feroz was one of two people killed when Indian police and paramilitary fired at random in the town marketplace on 6 September. The incident led to massive protests in the town, during which a further two people were killed. Separatist unrest across the region had lasted since July, resulting in more than 60 deaths. Kashmir, which is over 60 percent Muslim, has been disputed by India and Pakistan since the partition of the subcontinent in 1947. From 1989 onwards, a growing Muslim separatist movement against Indian control has led to frequent clashes with government forces.
Photographer : Altaf Qadri


People in the News: Stories – Pakistan Floods

Flood victims scramble for food rations in the downwash of a Pakistan Army helicopter, during relief operations in Sindh, the province worst-hit by the floods. Unusually heavy monsoon rains in July triggered the worst flood in Pakistan's history. Beginning in the northern province of Baluchistan, the flood spread throughout the Indus River Basin to Punjab and Sindh in the south. At one point, around one fifth of the country's total land mass was under water. Over 20 million people were directly affected by the floods with up to 1,600 killed, as homes were destroyed and crops and livestock were washed away. The country's infrastructure was devastated as thousands of kilometers of roads and railways were destroyed, in addition to some 7,000 schools and 400 health facilities. The Pakistan government, overwhelmed by the disaster, was accused of being slow to respond. Months after the flood, many Pakistanis were still suffering its effects. The loss of seed for the next planting season and the vast areas left uninhabitable meant even longer-lasting consequences.
Photographer : Daniel Berehulak


General News: Singles – Haiti Aftermath

Port-au-Prince, Haiti A girl looks on as the Marché Hyppolite in Port-au-Prince burns, six days after a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck Haiti. The market, popularly known as the Marché en Fer (Iron Market) was a city landmark, dating back to 1891. The devastation caused by the earthquake appeared to paralyze authorities, leading to accusations of indecision and delay when it came to clean-up operations. But the enormity of the task that faced them, together with an infrastructure already weakened by decades of violent political instability and economic deprivation, were also to blame. Port-au-Prince presented further difficulties, as its hilly terrain and narrow streets, many of which became blocked by makeshift shelters, hindered access for heavy rubble-removing machinery. Aid agencies said that it could be years before reconstruction work was complete. The Marché en Fer was one of the first buildings in the capital to be restored, thanks largely to an € 8.8 million cash injection by a private donor. A year after the earthquake struck Haiti, just 5 percent of the resultant rubble had been removed from Port-au-Prince, but the Iron Market had re-opened for business with some 900 vendors.
Photographer : Riccardo Venturi


General News: Stories – Earthquake in Haiti

A man throwing the body of a dead child at the morgue of the general hospital, Port-au-Prince, Jan. 15, 2010. (AP Photo/Olivier Laban-Mattei/AFP)


Spot News: Singles

A man falls to his death from a turret of Liberty Bridge in Budapest, Hungary, after covering himself in flammable liquid and setting himself alight. Photographer : Péter Lakatos


Spot News: Stories – Earthquake in Haiti

Rescue of a woman trapped under earthquake rubble, Port-au-Prince, 12 January. Photographer : Daniel Morel


Daily Life: Singles

A man carries a shark through the streets of Mogadishu, Somalia, in September. Photographer : Feisal Omar


Daily Life: Stories – Metropolis

Mumbai, India.
Half of humanity now lives in a city, and the United Nations has predicted that 70 percent of the world's population will reside in urban areas by 2050.
Photographer : Martin Roemers


Nature: Singles

A Cape gannet comes in to land during the summer nesting season. Photographer : Thomas P. Peschak


Nature: Stories – Oil on Water

In April, the Deepwater Horizon oil-drilling rig, in the Gulf of Mexico off the Louisiana coast, sunk after an explosion. Photographer : Benjamin Lowy


Arts and Entertainment: Singles

Joséphine Nsimba Mpongo, 37, practices the cello in the Kimbanguiste neighborhood of Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo. Photographer : Andrew McConnell


Arts and Entertainment: Stories – At a Tent Theater Near You

Mekhar, Maharashtra, India.
A patron of a traveling cinema watches a film at a night screening. Nomadic cinemas travel to remote villages in India, far from fixed-site theaters. Films are shown in large tents, often using makeshift equipment, with the audience seated on the ground. Although India is home to the most prolific movie industry in the world, producing around 800 films a year, it has one of the lowest ratios of screens to population – 13 screens per million people. The traveling cinemas show mixed fare, including regional language films, Bollywood blockbusters and Hollywood movies, but they are facing a fight for survival as DVDs become more easily accessible and cable networks penetrate further into the country.
Photographer : Amit Madheshiya


Sports: Singles

The Netherlands' Demy de Zeeuw is accidentally kicked in the face by Uruguay's Martin Caceres during a World Cup semi-final soccer match in Cape Town, South Africa on 6 July. Photographer : Mike Hutchings


Sports: Stories

Guangzhou, China
Team China, watched by their coach Zhang Xiaohuan, dive into the pool during official practice before the free routine final of the synchronized swimming event at Foshan Aquatics Centre, during the 16th Asian Games.
Photographer Name : Adam Pretty


Contemporary Issues: Singles – Niger, 'Food Crisis'

Entrails and skeletons of dead livestock lie in the Gadabedji reserve in the Maradi region of Niger in western Africa. Photographer : Marco Di Lauro


Contemporary Issues: Stories – Escape from Somalia

Every year, thousands of people risk their lives crossing the Gulf of Aden to Yemen to escape conflict and poverty in the Horn of Africa. Photographer : Ed Ou



നിക്കോണ്‍ ഫോട്ടോ കോണ്‍ടസ്റ്റ് 2010-11

2011-ല്‍ നിക്കോണ്‍ നടത്തിയ മല്‍സരത്തില്‍ വിവിധ വിഭാഗങ്ങളില്‍ ഒന്നാംസ്ഥാനം നേടിയ ചിത്രങ്ങള്‍ .

Grand Prize Winner

Learning to fly. Photographer : Debarshi Duttagupta


'Energy' Category 1st Prize

The catcher in the rye. Photographer : Marlies Plank


Emerging Talent Award 1

Close- Photographer : Martin Stranka


Emerging Talent Award 2

EFFORT. Photographer : Truong Nhat Nam


Emerging Talent Award 3

Going to the Chapel. Photographer : Rebecca Bundschuh


Free subject Category 1st Prize

Waiting for the sunshine. Photographer : Binh Nguyen Huu Phuoc



നാഷണല്‍ ജിയോഗ്രാഫിക് ഫോട്ടോ കോണ്‍ടസ്റ്റ്
2011-ല്‍ നാഷണല്‍ ജിയോഗ്രാഫിക് നടത്തിയ മല്‍സരത്തില്‍ വിവിധ വിഭാഗങ്ങളില്‍ ഒന്നാംസ്ഥാനം നേടിയ ചിത്രങ്ങള്‍ .

Grand-Prize Winner and Nature Winner

Arrows of rain seem to pelt a dragonfly in Indonesia's Riau Islands in Shikhei Goh's winning image, 'Splashing.' Photographer : Shikhei Goh


Places Winner

A rainbow arches over the Philippines' Onuk Island after a rainstorm. Photographer : George Tapan


People Winner

With a single shot, a Sami reindeer hunter secures food for his family during the long Swedish winter.
Photographer : Izabelle Nordfjell



സോണി വേള്‍ഡ് ഫോട്ടോഗ്രാഫി അവാര്‍ഡ് 2011

2011-ല്‍ സോണി വേള്‍ഡ് നടത്തിയ മല്‍സരത്തില്‍ വിവിധ വിഭാഗങ്ങളില്‍ ഒന്നാംസ്ഥാനം നേടിയ ചിത്രങ്ങള്‍ .

Photographer of the Year 2011

Photographer : Alejandro Chaskielberg (Argentina)


Overall Open Category Winner

Photographer : Chan Kwok Hung


Current Affairs – Winner

Photographer : Javier Arcenillas (Spain)


Contemporary Issues – Winner

Photographer : Javier Arcenillas (Spain)


Sport – Winner

Photographer : Pavel Wolberg (Israel)


Arts and Culture – Winner

Photographer : Amit Madheshiya (India)


Travel – Winner

Photographer : Liz Loh-Taylor (Australia)


Lifestyle – Winner

Photographer : Saja Seus (Germany)


Fine Art – Architecture Winner

Photographer : Alnis Stakle (Latvia)


Portraiture – Winner

Photographer : Alain Willaume (France)


Landscape – Winner

Photographer : Florence Iff (Switzerland)


Still Life – Winner

Photographer : Renhui Zhao (Singapore)


Conceptual – Winner

Photographer : Paul Gisbrecht (Germany)



ബ്രിട്ടീഷ് വൈല്‍ഡ് ലൈഫ് ഫോട്ടോഗ്രാഫി അവാര്‍ഡ് 2011
2011-ല്‍ ബ്രിട്ടീഷ് വൈല്‍ഡ് ലൈഫ് നടത്തിയ മല്‍സരത്തില്‍ വിവിധ വിഭാഗങ്ങളില്‍ ഒന്നാംസ്ഥാനം നേടിയ ചിത്രങ്ങള്‍ .
The 2011 British Wildlife Photographer of the Year

Jellyfish in the Blue Sea of Sula Sgeir' by Richard Shucksmith. Photographer : Richard Shucksmith


2011 Winner: Animal Portraits

Mystical Mist (Fallow Deer, Dama dama). Photographer : Mark Smith


2011 Winner: Animal Behaviour

Grey Heron Walking on Water. Photographer : Andrew Parkinson


2011 Winner: Urban Wildlife

Champagne Starling (European Starling,Sturnes Vulgaris). Photographer : David Biggs


2011 Winner: Hidden Britain

Scorpion Fly on a Leaf (Scorpion Fly, Panorpa communis). Photographer : Leslie Holburn


2011 Winner: Wildlife in my Backyard

Busy Wasp on Blackberries (Common Wasp, Vespula vulgaris). Photographer : Rana Dias


2011 Winner: Habitat

Hare in Morning Light with Hoar Frost (Brown Hare, Lepus europaeus). Photographer : Ian Paul Haskell


2011 Winner: British Seasons

Thick-legged Flower Beetle on Corn Marigold. Photographer : Ross Hoddinott


2011 Winner: Living Landscape: Connectivity

Llyn Idwal – War and Peace. Photographer : Graham Eaton



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