Image for Our world is beautiful: winning images from the world’s largest photography awards

Our world is beautiful: winning images from the world’s largest photography awards

With half a million submissions from people across the globe, this photography competition celebrates the beauty of our planet

With half a million submissions from people across the globe, this photography competition celebrates the beauty of our planet

A woman slams down the winning card in a smoky Indonesian teahouse game of dominoes. This everyday moment in a south-east Asian village has won the top prize in this year’s photo award from photo printing firm Cewe. It beat more than half a million other entries to the world’s largest photography competition, on the theme of ‘our world is beautiful’.

Judges chose photographer Ariani Dikye’s image over shots of exploding volcanoes and New York City skyscrapers, because it captured “how joy comes to life when people come together in their community to share the beauty of their world in a moment”.

As well as championing photographers from around the world, the competition raises money – 10 cents for every photo submitted. This year’s competition has raised €50,962 (£44,317). The money will be given to the EduCare Baidoa project in Somalia – a project run by the non-profit SOS Children’s Villages. It is renovating schools, training teachers and ‘guaranteeing 2,000 children a good education’, following 30 years of civil war that have left more than three million children without a school to go to.

The jury was chaired by Swiss artist, filmmaker and Vogue photographer Michel Comte. 

The winning images

Main image: Overall winner and ‘people’ category winner. ‘Warung kopi’ – ‘a place where people meet and hang out in a village’, taken by Ariani Dikye in Bogor, Indonesia

For the full winner’s gallery, click here.

You’re the solution that Positive News needs

Our small, dedicated team is passionate about building a better alternative to the negative news media. And there’s never been a greater urgency to our mission.

But to invest in producing all the solutions journalism that the world is longing for, we need funding. And because we work in your interests – not those of a wealthy media mogul or corporate owner – we’re asking readers like you to get behind our team, by making a regular contribution as a Positive News supporter.

Give once from just £1, or join 1,200+ others who contribute an average of £3 or more per month.

Join our community today, and together, we’ll change the news for good.

Support the Positive News team

Related articles