Every year I say, "Maybe next year," and this year is no different.
Today the
results of the World Press Photo contest were released and I have to say that the winning images are seriously impressive. Congratulations to the winners!
While we don't, or shouldn't, work as photojournalists to win awards, it is nice to have your work recognized. WPP is the worlds largest photo contest and a prize in it isn't exactly bad news to wake up to.
But as I've said in the past, a person can't sit on any single contest prize and hope to be successful on bragging rights alone. Photographers who are successful over time, and some time and time again, repeatedly use their skill, their motivation, their creativity, and their opportunities to make images like many that are included as winners in this year's WPP.
Success at anything is about continuing to work hard to improve yourself and your craft. It's about not being happy with the status quo, and about thinking outside of the box. It's about never giving up and finding inspiration in the work of others around you.
Finding the proper and most efficient ways to do this is more than half the battle.
What strikes me often about many winning images I look at from contests, beyond the memorable images of course, is the access that photographers were able to secure, for one reason or another. Access takes forethought. It takes planning. It takes organization. And it takes vision. It takes patience. And it takes persistence.
There will always be award winning images that come from a photographer "just being there," but in my opinion these are the exception.
Beyond the stellar images produced this past year - and not just those that placed - I want to congratulate those photographers and photo editors that see the value of time spent planning, envisioning, and working to create those rare situations where compelling photographs are made.
The starting point for great photojournalism is foresight and fortitude.
I think we all have the potential to make stunning images, and to tell compelling stories, but you have to be there, and getting there is where the difference is made.
So, again this year, I'm doing my best with the opportunities I have, and trying to reach beyond what's immediately obvious, or available. We should all do this. And in doing so we can hope for great images and stories to develop from it.
And then we can say, with conviction, and not hollow words, "Maybe next year!"