30 nature-loving photographers are shortlisted for an exhibition you can see in London from next month.
In our hyperconnected world, some environmental images still have the power to make us stop and stare.
Nearly 2,000 images were submitted to Earth Photo this year, an international programme that has been platforming photographers’ and filmmakers’ work since 2018.
Co-founded by the UK’s Royal Geographical Society, Forestry England and visual art consultancy Parker Harries, Earth Photo seeks out conversation-sparking photos that show the world and its changing climate and ecosystems.
On 2024’s shortlist, 30 photographers meet this brief in 122 dazzling photos, capturing a world in transition.
‘‘Earth Photo is a great platform for artists to share personal observations and offer urgent provocations about our planet,” says Skinder Hundal, global director of arts at the British Council.
“Never has there been a more important time where we need new ways to understand the beautiful world we inhabit. Creating reflective exhibition spaces and celebrating creative responses provides for a deeper contemplation and brings us together in times of need.”
7. Melting glaciers in Switzerland
Changing Landscapes by Anna Korbut depicts glaciers in Switzerland covered with fabric to protect them from melting.
The country’s glaciers have lost one third of their volume in just the last 10 years.
6. Trash-eating elephants in Sri Lanka
This photo exposes a distressing reality in Ampara, Sri Lanka, where elephants are forced to eat garbage due to a lack of efficient waste management.
Waste accumulation near forests lures elephants and other animals away from their natural habitats, and the plastic meal puts their lives at risk.
5. Mangrove forests in Vietnam
Mangrove forests like this one in Vietnam’s coastal Quang Ngai province are a vital shield against typhoons.
Unfortunately, the trees have been depleted by climate change, population growth, and the increased use of water for fish farming.
4. Sea level rise in Spain
In his ‘Dry Horizons’ project, Markel Redondo explores the harsh reality of ongoing drought in Spain.
This mind-boggling image of private swimming pools on a rocky outcrop of land contrasts with another in the series: a man walking along playa Babilonia Guardamar de Segura, where the sea has risen to touching distance of the beachfront houses.
3. A majestic oak in England
An English oak cuts a magnificent outline in the Forest of Dean – believed to be one of the last oaks planted here in the 1700s for shipbuilding.
A recent study found that amid Europe’s native forests, the English oak is the only species set to adapt well to climate change this century.
2. A burning gas crater in Turkmenistan
The Darvaza Gas Crater, known as the Gates of Hell, has been burning for over 50 years.
It was drilled by Soviet engineers in 1971 as a natural gas well, but when it collapsed they had to set the crater on fire to prevent poisonous gases from escaping. Scientists expect the site to continue burning for decades to come.
In a more hopeful snapshot, a ‘tree’ of healthy elkhorn coral gets a checkup at the world’s largest underwater coral nursery in the US.
1. A coral nursery in the US
Last summer’s extreme marine heatwave caused a mass coral bleaching event in the Florida Keys, a reef area that had already declined by 90 percent due to disease and past heatwaves.
Roxane Boonstra (pictured) is one of the experts at the Coral Restoration Foundation’s Tavernier nursery determined to help coral rebound.
When will Earth Photo prizes be announced, and where can you see the winners?
A number of prizes will be bestowed upon the shortlisted artists at an awards ceremony at the Royal Geographical Society in London on 17 June.
The Earth Photo Award winner will take home the top cash prize of £1,000 for an “outstanding photography project that tells a compelling story about life on our planet.”
This will also mark the opening of the Earth Photo 2024 exhibition, open to the public from 18 June to 21 August.
“The exhibition will bring some of the best photography of our planet in all its aspects from stunning landscapes, engaging fauna and flora and images that remind us of the fragility of our world and the environment that human-kind calls home,” says Michael Pritchard, photography consultant at the Royal Photographic Society.
The exhibition will then tour six Forestry England sites across the UK, followed by five National Trust locations, the Lost Gardens of Heligan, Cornwall, and Sidney Nolan Trust, Herefordshire.
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