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Here Are Our 40 Award-Winning Photos That Show The Art Of Capturing A Family Moment
Family photography can be so many things: Emotional, powerful, funny, impactful, tender, surprising, meaningful... I could go on and on.
Amongst all those things, family photography is art. Art that is captured and composed on the fly—in the briefest of moments—because documentary family photography (which we celebrate at This is Reportage: Family) is totally unstaged. Nothing posed—just totally natural, real moments.
The images you see below are selected award-winning captures from our first two Collections on This is Reportage: Family. For each Collection, we've had over 4000 entries from all over the world, with our judges (themselves world-class photographers) choosing to award just the top few percent.
No poses; nothing staged—This is Reportage: Family.
More info: thisisreportagefamily.com | Instagram | Facebook
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Els Korsten (Netherlands)
Menino Conhece Menina (Portugal)
Bex Maini (UK)
Sanne De Block (Belgium)
Emily Renier (UK)
Catherine Hudson (France)
Rachel Ryan (UK)
Pedro Vilela (Portugal)
Lavinia Nitu (Italy)
Joshua D'hondt (Belgium)
Susan White (United States)
Adam Riley (UK)
Anna Rowland (UK)
Andrzej Witek (Spain)
Julia Rose-Greim (Germany)
Marine Poron (France)
Joao Lourenco (Portugal)
Pedro Vilela (Portugal)
Jess Lycoops (Denmark)
Logan Westom (United States)
Joshua D'hondt (Belgium)
Paula Gerein (Canada)
Rowena Meadows (Australia)
Jena Love (United States)
Marieke Zentjens (Netherlands)
Marisa Martins (Portugal)
Daphne Matthys (Belgium)
Linsey Aandewiel (Netherlands)
Raluca Chase (UK)
Louise Van Den Broek (Netherlands)
Ana Backhaus (United Arab Emirates)
Elly Van Herck (Belgium)
Erica Hawkins (UK)
Susan Gibbs (United States)
Lisa Hu Chen (United States)
Alice Chapman (UK)
Simona Dietiker (Switzerland)
Katrin Küllenberg (Germany)
Linda Bouritius-Colenbrander (Netherlands)
Liesbeth Parlevliet (Netherlands)
I think it's a bit odd that the topic is supposed to be family, but so many of them are of solitary children. To me, family implies more than one person.
I think it's a bit odd that the topic is supposed to be family, but so many of them are of solitary children. To me, family implies more than one person.