Portrait/Personality
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First Place - Sarah L. Voisin, The Washington Post
Second Place - Mary F. Calvert, ZumaPress
Third Place - Jim Lo Scalzo, EPA
Award of Excellence - Katherine Frey, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Mary F. Calvert, Freelance
Award of Excellence - Mary F. Calvert, Freelance
Award of Excellence - Olivier Douliery, Freelance
Pictorial
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First Place - Patrick Smith, Getty Images
Second Place - Olivier Douliery, ABACA PRESS / TNS
Third Place - Jahi Chikwendiu, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Christopher T. Assaf, Freelance
Award of Excellence - Michael Reynolds, EPA
Award of Excellence - Sarah L. Voisin, The Washington Post
Feature
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First Place - Rod Lamkey Jr., Freelance
Second Place - Jim Lo Scalzo, EPA
Third Place - Mary F. Calvert, Freelance
Award of Excellence - Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images
Award of Excellence - Olivier Douliery, ABACA PRESS / TNS
Award of Excellence - Tom Williams, Roll Call
Sports Action
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First Place - Toni L. Sandys, The Washington Post
Second Place - Jim Watson, Agence France-Presse
Third Place - Pete Marovich, UPI
Award of Excellence - Katherine Frey, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Pablo Martinez Monsivais, The Associated Press
Award of Excellence - Patrick Smith, Getty Images
Sports Feature/Reaction
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First Place - Patrick Smith, Getty Images
Second Place - Patrick Smith, Getty Images
Third Place - Jonathan Newton, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Alex Brandon, The Associated Press
Award of Excellence - Pete Marovich, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Pete Marovich, UPI
Award of Excellence - Ricky Carioti, The Washington Post
Presidential
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First Place - Doug Mills, The New York Times
Second Place - Kevin Lamarque, Reuters
Third Place - Kevin Lamarque, Reuters
Award of Excellence - Jim Watson, Agence France-Presse
Award of Excellence - Aude Guerrucci, Polaris
Award of Excellence - Doug Mills, The New York Times
Award of Excellence - Kevin Lamarque, Reuters
Insider’s Washington
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First Place - Carolyn Kaster, The Associated Press
Second Place - Brooks Kraft, Corbis
Third Place - Jim Lo Scalzo, EPA
Award of Excellence - Jacquelyn Martin, The Associated Press
Award of Excellence - Jabin Botsford, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Bonnie Jo Mount, The Washington Post
On Capitol Hill
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First Place - Andrew Harnik, The Associated Press
Second Place - Rod Lamkey Jr., Freelance
Third Place - Jonathan Ernst, Reuters
Award of Excellence - Tom Williams, Roll Call
Award of Excellence - Saul Loeb, Agence France-Presse
Award of Excellence - Drew Angerer, Bloomberg
Award of Excellence - Molly Riley, UPI
Award of Excellence - Andrew Harrer, Bloomberg
Domestic News
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First Place - Christopher T. Assaf, The Baltimore Sun
Second Place - Gabriella Demczuk, Freelancer
Third Place - Alex Brandon, The Associated Press
Award of Excellence - Gabriella Demczuk, The New York Times
Award of Excellence - Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images
Award of Excellence - Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images
Award of Excellence - Bill O'Leary, The Washington Post
International News
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First Place - Win McNamee, Getty Images
Second Place - Win McNamee, Getty Images
Third Place - Matt McClain, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Win McNamee, Getty Images
Picture Story/Politics
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First Place - Bill Clark, Roll Call
First Place - Doug Mills, The New York Times
Third Place - Doug Mills, The New York Times
Award of Excellence - Melina Mara, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Melina Mara, The Washington Post
Picture Story/Feature
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First Place - Mary F. Calvert, ZumaPress
Second Place - Jim Lo Scalzo, EPA
Third Place - Jim Lo Scalzo, EPA
Award of Excellence - David Burnett, Contact Press Images for National Geographic
Award of Excellence - Melina Mara, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Matt McClain, The Washington Post
Picture Story/News
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First Place - Gabriella Demczuk, Freelance
Second Place - Mary F. Calvert, ZumaPress
Third Place - Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images
Award of Excellence - Jabin Botsford, The Washington Post
Picture Story International
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First Place - Win McNamee, Getty Images
Second Place - Sarah L. Voisin, The Washington Post
Third Place - Bonnie Jo Mount, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Bonnie Jo Mount, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Matt McClain, The Washington Post
Picture Story/Sports
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First Place - Patrick Smith, Getty Images
Second Place - Mike Morones, Military Times
Third Place - Sarah L. Voisin, The Washington Post
Political Portfolio
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Political Photo of the Year - Melina Mara, The Washington Post
Second Place - Doug Mills, The New York Times
Third Place - Win McNamee, Getty Images
Portfolio
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First Place - Jim LoScalzo, EPA
Second Place - Matt McClain, The Washington Post
Third Place - Bonnie Jo Mount, The Washington Post
Award of Excellence - Mary F. Calvert, ZumaPress
Award of Excellence - Sarah Voisin, The Washington Post
Top Honors
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Photographer of the Year - Jim LoScalzo, EPA
Political Photo of the Year - Doug Mills, The New York Times
Michael Robinson Chavez
Michael Robinson Chávez has been a photographer at The Los Angeles Times since 2007. Prior to that, he worked for The Washington Post, The Boston Globe and the Associated Press. He has covered assignments in over 50 countries including: the Congolese Civil War, the tsunamis in Indonesia and Chile, the Egyptian revolution, life in Brazil’s slums, gold mining in Peru, the 2006 Hezbollah/Israeli war, the conflict in Israel/Palestine and the US led invasion and occupation of Iraq.
Michael is a two time Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for Photojournalism winner, in 2015 and 2012 and was twice named second place Photographer of the Year by Pictures of the Year International in 2014 and 2010. In 2015 Michael received a silver prize from the China International Press Photo Contest and a Judge’s Special Recognition in the Environmental Vision Award for his work on the California drought. Michael won the Scripps Howard National Award for Photojournalism and has also twice been named Photographer of the Year by The White House News Photographers’ Association.
His work has been exhibited widely, including the Visa Pour l’image festival in France, the Corcoran Gallery in Washington DC, Imagenes Havana in Cuba, the Head On Photo Festival in Sydney, the War Photo Ltd. Gallery in Dubrovnik and at the Museu Memorial de l’Exili in Spain.
He is publishing a book of his photographs from Peru: “Awaiting the Rain,” next year. In addition he teaches and lectures at workshops throughout the world including Mexico, Argentina, India, Thailand, Egypt, Peru, Australia, the United States and El Salvador.
Melissa Farlow
Melissa Farlow has extensively worked for National Geographic magazine in the American West and photographed diverse cultures and landscapes while in South America, Quebec, Alaska, the Alps, and the Okefenokee Swamp in over 20 National Geographic projects.
Awarded a Pulitzer Prize with the staff of the Louisville Courier-Journal, Farlow received a National Headliner Award as well as Pictures of the Year portfolio honors while at the Pittsburgh Press. Named Distinguished Alumni by the IU School of Journalism, she was inducted into Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame in 2013.
Farlow teamed up with Terri Farley for the book Wild at Heart, which focuses on mustangs and young people who are trying to save them. Farlow’s National Geographic books include Wild Lands of the West and Long Road South featuring South America’s Pan American highway. She documented women’s roles in three African nations for Women in the Material World. Her images are printed in over 70 books including Day in the Life series and Geographic’s The Photographs, Best 100 Wildlife Photographs and in Women Photographers at National Geographic.
In addition to projects for the Heinz Endowments and the Ford Foundation, her work is published in Smithsonian, GEO, LIFE, National Geographic Traveler and Sierra magazines. Farlow’s received a Masters degree in Journalism while teaching at the University of Missouri. She teaches workshops and is a frequent lecturer as well as a photography consultant with thephotosociety. She and her husband, Randy Olson, a longtime National Geographic contributing photographer, live in Pennsylvania and Oregon.
William Snyder
Four-time Pulitzer Prize winning photographer and editor William Snyder is Professor and Chair of the Photojournalism Program at his alma mater, the Rochester Institute of Technology.
After graduating from RIT with Highest Honors in 1981, Snyder joined The Miami News and two years later moved to the photography staff of The Dallas Morning News. During his 15 years as a staff photographer Snyder won three Pulitzers Prizes.
In 1998 Snyder changed roles and became a picture editor/manager. He served as the Night Photo Editor, Assignments Editor, Metro/Suburban Photo Editor, and Assistant Director of Photography in the DMN’s aggressive Collin County bureau.
In 2005 he was named The Morning News’ Director of Photography and guided the photography staff to the 2006 Pulitzer Prize in Breaking News for their coverage of Hurricane Katrina. He also produced “Eyes of The Storm”, a 256-page book featuring the DMN photo staff’s images from hurricanes Katrina and Rita that sold over 14,000 copies. In September of 2006, Snyder took a buy-out from The Morning News.
Snyder has won numerous awards from local, state, national and international competitions, lectured to numerous universities and journalism associations, has been published in dozens of publications and has worked with the rock group The Who for nearly 15 years.