A Celebration of Shadows and Light
In a world saturated with the neon glare of endless images, the Exposure One Awards reminds us that sometimes the most arresting stories are told in shades of gray. This year’s edition of the prestigious black and white photography contest brought together visionaries from 64 countries, affirming that monochrome remains not a relic, but a living, breathing language of visual truth.
The top honor, International Photographer of the Year, was awarded to Mexican photographer Arturo Gómez Sierra for his haunting image Lux. A shaft of light descends to caress a solitary cross, its stark symmetry echoing a prayer in chiaroscuro. Stripped of color, the photograph becomes a hymn to silence itself—proof that the absence of hues can speak louder than a saturated spectrum ever could.

New Discoveries in the Monochrome Realm
Equally compelling was the recognition of British artist Dulcie May, named International Discovery of the Year. Her series transforms the human body into an otherworldly terrain: folds, curves, and lines rendered as landscapes where intimacy and abstraction intertwine. May’s work is sensual without slipping into cliché, revealing the body not as object, but as architecture—a cathedral of skin, shadow, and light.

Here lies the true miracle of black and white: the ability to unmask the ordinary and reveal the sublime. In May’s hands, the human form ceases to be literal; it becomes a dreamscape where every contour is a horizon.

The Jury and the Global Stage
With jurors drawn from institutions like the Leica Gallery and SFMoMA, the awards reinforce their place as a cultural barometer for contemporary fine art photography. Across 20 categories, both professional and non-professional photographers were celebrated, ensuring that fresh voices stand alongside seasoned masters.

The winning works, now part of a digital archive, collectively argue for black and white as more than nostalgia. These images breathe with urgency, proving that the monochrome medium is not bound to the past but continually reinvented in the present.

Why Black and White Endures
To look at these works is to remember why monochrome photography endures in an age of infinite filters. Stripped of distraction, the world becomes distilled: textures rise, contrasts sharpen, meaning unfurls. Black and white forces us to dwell longer, to read the play of shadow as one reads poetry—slowly, line by line, breath by breath.

Editor’s Choice
The Exposure One Awards do more than crown winners; they reaffirm the eternal allure of photography’s simplest, yet most complex form. Against the cacophony of color, black and white whispers—and the world listens.