The sixth Close-up Photographer of the Year competition has come to a close in spectacular style with the winners announced in all 11 categories, as well as the overall champion. From more than 11,000 entries, the team whittled it down to the very best to award prizes in everything from Fungi & Slime Molds to Arachnids and even Studio Art. Let’s take a close-up look (see what we did there) at the winners.
ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE
The overall winner of Close-up Photographer of the Year 6 was awarded to Svetlana Ivanenko for her image, titled Clash of the Titans, of two male stag beetles battling. She scooped the £2,500 (approx. US$3,000) cash prize and trophy. Of her winning photograph, Ivanenko said “For a brief period in summer, stag beetles (Lucanus cervus) engage in fierce battles for mating rights. These elusive creatures inhabit oak forests, making them difficult to find. I travelled 700km [435 miles] to witness this beautiful event and I want to share it with everyone.”
Young Close-up Photographer of the Year 6 was awarded to 14-year-old Andrés Luis Dominguez Blanco.
© Andrés Luis Dominguez Blanco | cupoty.com
The Young Close-up Photographer of the Year 6 was awarded to Andrés Luis Dominguez Blanco for his stunning and bright image of a bee-eater above some wildflowers with an insect in its beak, titled Spring. He said “I captured this image in late spring in southern Spain. Having previously observed bee-eaters with binoculars, I knew exactly where they would fly after hunting insects.”
The winner of the animals category was this image taken via camera trap.
Image Credit: © Santiago J. Monroy García | cupoty.com
The first place in the Animals category was won by Santiago J. Monroy García from Colombia, for an image titled God in the Shadows of an Andean bear taken with a camera trap.
Pierluigi Rizzo won first prize for Queen of Hearts, an image of a female Mediterranean black widow in the Arachnids category – this is the first time the category has featured in the competition.
This is the first time the Arachnids category has been featured in CUPOTY.
Image Credit: © Pierluigi Rizzo| cupoty.com
“Every year I’m fortunate enough to spend time with scientists, editors, naturalists, journalists and photographers while judging CUPOTY, and every year I’m blown away by the calibre of entries. Close-up photography is a celebration of curiosity, and this year’s Top 100 is a true testament to the artistry of everyone involved as well as an invitation to look, marvel at and honour the world around us,” said CUPOTY co-founder Tracy Calder in a statement sent to IFLScience.
Joris Vegter explained that “It took me four years to find this particular composition: four bees sleeping together in a heart shape—the perfect shot I had been searching for!”
Image Credit: © Joris Vegter | cupoty.com
Inside the top ten of the Insects category includes Joris Vegter’s image of four snuggling gold-tailed Melitta bees asleep inside a flower.
ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE
Sigfrido Zimmermann’s image of a white fir tree surrounded by giant sequoias took third in the Intimate Landscape category
“A walk through a montane forest with giant sequoias is a feast for the senses.”
Image Credit: © Sigfrido Zimmermann | cupoty.com
The Top 100 images and winners can be seen here. The seventh Close-up Photographer of the Year will open in May 2025.
Source Link: Stag Beetles Fighting, Bee-Eaters Flying, And A Camera Trap Bear: Marvel At The Winners Of Close-Up Photographer Of The Year