Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest

Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest

Opening: September 1, 2019
Deadline: September 30, 2019
Entry fee: Free
Prizes: from €200 to €1,500, certificates

Participate in Wiki Loves Monuments, the largest photography competition in the world, and help Wikipedia document monuments and heritage buildings. The only thing you have to do for that is to upload a freely-licensed image of a monument in one of the participating countries to Wikimedia Commons.

Wiki Loves Monuments is running in more than 35 countries around the world from the 1st – 30th of September 2019 (unless mentioned otherwise). Every country has its own monuments, organisation, partners and awards – and the ten best photos for each country will be submitted to the international finale. By entering a national competition, you automatically compete in the international competition.

International contest

The competition consists of a series of national competitions and an international finale. Each national contest is allowed to nominate ten images for the international finale.

Theme

Monuments, historical places

Website: https://www.wikilovesmonuments.org/awards/

Wiki Loves Monuments 2018 Winners

Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque, Iran, © Alireza Akhlaghi, 1st prize, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque, Iran
© Alireza Akhlaghi
1st prize

Alireza Akhlaghi had plenty of time inside the famed Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque to capture the photo that leads this blog post. Why? He walked in at exactly noon, just as the building was about to close down for two hours. He was able to convince the mosque’s guards to let him inside anyway, even though they told him that they’d have to lock him inside until the building re-opened. “I was all by myself and taking photos,” he wrote.

One of the fruits of his labor was this, unusual in that the mosque’s closure meant that a red spotlight—”which ruins the beautiful colors of the ceiling and the altar,” he wrote—was shut off. Akhlaghi’s effort paid off, as he won first overall in this year’s Wiki Loves Monuments.

 

Petra, Jordan, © Mustafa Waad Saeed, 2nd prize, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
Petra, Jordan
© Mustafa Waad Saeed
2nd prize

Mustafa Waad Saeed went to ancient Petra, Jordan, to celebrate his birthday early this year. An amateur photographer, he nonetheless won second place for what one jury member called a “magical picture” which “revolves around light and spirituality” and connects the place’s humanity with “its timeless cultural heritage.”

 

Cloisters at Gloucester Cathedral, United Kingdom, © Christopher Cherrington, 3rd Prize, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
Cloisters at Gloucester Cathedral, United Kingdom
© Christopher Cherrington
3rd Prize

Christopher Cherrington has been taking photos for over five decades, but only got into digital photography late last year. He spent 75 minutes capturing the 26 individual photos that make up this panoramic view, blending them together to account for stray tourists wandering in and out of shot.

“Capturing this image wasn’t just a ‘moment’ of opportunity,” he said. “I planned it carefully before even setting out from home, with strategies to overcome the expected challenges: tourists, dynamic range of light and wide angle of shot.” The time investment was rewarded with a third-place showing.

 

© Abdul Momin, 4th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Abdul Momin
4th place

First-time Wiki Loves Monuments participant Abdul Momin told us that “I want to show the world how beautiful my country is,” and he’s certainly done just that with this photograph of Pancha Ratna Govinda Temple in Puthia, Bangladesh.

 

© Shahriar Amin Fahim, 5th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Shahriar Amin Fahim
5th place

Shahriar Amin Fahim is an engineering student, which gets in the way of his photography hobby, so he asked us to tell everyone that you need to “live your life, live your dreams.” What’s special about this image is how it captured both the beautiful architecture of the Baitul Mukarram National Mosque and one of the people who keep it that way. Fahim traveled over thirty kilometers and waited about two hours for the perfect shot, which shows a khadem—someone who has dedicated their life to serve the mosque—cleaning a courtyard. “What I like about this image is its grittiness,” one judge said, showing “the reality of the life of those who care for the building on a daily basis.” A different view of the mosque came in eleventh place, and Fahim also won fifteenth place.

 

© Nrik Kiran, 6th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Nrik Kiran
6th place

The five-story pagoda-style Nyatapola, a Hindu temple dedicated to Siddhi Lakshmi and part of the UNESCO World Heritage site of Bhaktapur city, has survived two earthquakes in the last century. That allowed Nrik Kiran to take this photo, which one judge commended for “connecting human spirituality with a building designed to elevate us.” Another wrote that it “is beautiful representation of the interaction of the tangible and intangible heritage. The photo is beautiful as a documentary as well as the architectural photograph.”

 

© Marian Naworski, 7th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Marian Naworski
7th place

Despite the ornate stained glass windows, this building is a former factory in the city of Łódź, Poland. One judge wrote of this photo that it “captures the interconnectedness of Europe’s industrial heritage with an AEG engine in a beautifully designed Polish building. It is the light and the subtle colours that make this photograph work.”

 

© Mikhail Prokhorov, 8th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Mikhail Prokhorov
8th place

This dreary, haunting, and depressing photograph comes to us from Mikhail Prokhorov, who hopes that it serves as a warning of the threats faced by much of the cultural monuments in Russia’s isolated northern regions. Taken in Kenozersky National Park, over 1,000 kilometers from home, Prokhorov writes that this photo made a “deep impression on me, such a mixed feeling—it was beautiful and tragic simultaneously. Many monuments such as this one are almost unknown.”

 

© Mark Toso/Ancient Skys Photography, 9th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Mark Toso/Ancient Skys Photography
9th place

Mark Toso wanted to “juxtapose the timeless and eternal quality of the art carved in stone,” and waited all night to do so. He submitted this photograph of the Procession Panel in Cedar Mesa, Utah, United States, in the hope of raising awareness of its current endangered status, being outside the recently shrunk Bears Ears National Monument.

 

© Dragos Pirvulescu, 10th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Dragos Pirvulescu
10th place

This may be Dragos Pirvulescu’s fourth year of participating in Wiki Loves Monuments, but he’s been taking photographs for about thirty years. The photograph here, of Romania’s Fortress of Deva, was an entirely unplanned shot—he was driving to his hometown early one morning when he spotted this viewpoint. He quickly pulled to the side of the road and came away with this, which one judge commended for “a spectacular sunset/sunrise [that] gives this image a very warm, visually appealing look, and the perspective looking down on shows just how dominating the monument is above the city.”

 

© Md. Nazmul Hasan Khan, 11th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Md. Nazmul Hasan Khan
11th place

Another view of the Baitul Mukarram National Mosque, which also featured in fifth place, this photo was praised by one judge for its “excellent composition, combined with a masterful control of lights and colors. I particularly like the artist’s decision to show the current use of the monument which adds additional educational value to the image.”

 

© Krzysztof Golik, 12th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Krzysztof Golik
12th place

This panorama of the Abbey Church of Saint Foy shows “more than just a church,” one judge wrote. “It gives us the strong feeling of the typical atmosphere of a European village in the early hours, represented by a lone passerby.” Photographer Krzysztof Golik told us that the church is only seven kilometers from where he lives, and the foggy Sunday morning presented an ideal opportunity to go out and take photographs with a friend.

 

© Maksym Prysiazhniuk, 13th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Maksym Prysiazhniuk
13th place

Maksym Prysiazhniuk planned this beautiful symmetric photo in advance of a vacation to Copenhagen, Denmark, with his wife. (They wanted to discover what he called a “fairy-tale city”—and what hygge is like!)

 

© Chris Terajet, 14th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Chris Terajet
14th place

The UK’s West Pier makes for a ghostly subject when viewed in the light of a pale sunrise. One judge wrote that the pier rises up “like the skeleton of a forgotten sea creature.”

 

© Shahriar Amin Fahim, 15th place, Wiki Loves Monuments Photo Contest
© Shahriar Amin Fahim
15th place

Shahriar Amin Fahim thought about capturing this timeless photo of the Hardinge Bridge in Bangladesh over the course of nearly a year—and he coupled the winter fog with the composition he dreamed about to place in the competition for a second time (#5).


The text of this post has been contributed by Ed Erhart, Senior Editorial Associate, Communications at the Wikimedia Foundation.

 

 

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