These are the 2022 World Nature Photography Awards Contest Winners – NBC Los Angeles

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The World Nature Photography Awards announced the winning photographs from its 2022 photo competition.

The contest aims to use the power of photography to put a spotlight on the wonder of the natural world, reminding viewers to take action now to protect the planet and secure a better tomorrow.

The contest, which opened to U.S. residents last year, invited readers to submit a digital photograph in over a dozen categories, such as animals, plants and fungi and people and nature. The grand prize winner receives a cash prize of $1,000. Here are all the gold medal winners by category:

Animal Portraits

Winner of World Nature Photographer of the Year

Crocodile

A crocodile in the mud at Mana Pools National Park, Zimbabwe. (Jens Cullmann)

Behaviour – Mammals

Baboons

Japanese macaques in Awaji Island, Japan. (Hidetoshi Ogata)

Behaviour – Amphibians and reptiles

Toads

Japanese stream toads in the Owase Mountains, Mie, Japan. (Norihiro Ikuma)

Behaviour – Birds

Bird

A male Hooded Merganser in Huntley Meadows Park, Alexandria, Virginia. (Charles Schmidt)

Behaviour – Invertebrates

Red crab

A red crab (Grapsus adscensionis) in La Gomera Island, Spain (Javier Herranz Casellas)

Nature Art

Spawning coral.

Spawning coral in the Red Sea. (Tom Shlesinger)

People and Nature

Inside of a glacier.

The view from inside a glacier looking up at the night sky in Solheimajokull, South Iceland. (Virgil Reglioni)

Plants and Fungi

Eucalyptus

Eucalyptus in Mount Barker, Western Australia (Julie Kenny)

Urban Wildlife

Common kestrel

Common kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) in Stara Zagora, Bulgaria. (Vladislav Tasev)

Planet Earth’s Landscapes and Environments

Grand Teton Peak

Grand Teton Peak in Wyoming, USA (Jake Mosher)

Black and White

Iguana

Lesser Antillean Iguana in Grenada Island, West Indies. (Alain Ernoult)

Animals in their Habitat

Snow leopard

A snow leopard in the Indian Himalayas. (Sascha Fonseca)

Nature Photojournalism

Australian fur seal

Australian fur seal in Port Kembla, NSW, Australia. (Nicolas Remy)

Underwater

Australian fur seal

Harlequin shrimps in the Hymanocera Lembeh strait, Indonesia. (Adriano Morettin)

To see the full gallery of winners, visit the World Nature Photography Awards website.

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Pottsville High School Upgrading planetarium

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The Pottsville Area School District just announced one of its newest projects — upgrading the nearly 60-year-old planetarium.

POTTSVILLE, Pa. — Many people throughout Schuylkill County don’t know a planetarium is inside Pottsville Area High School.

“When it was installed in the summer of 1966, I don’t think anybody would have imagined that it would last to 57 years,” said Adrian Portland, science department lead teacher.

Nearly 60 years old, the technology in the planetarium is in need of an upgrade.

“When I go to turn the keys, sometimes at this point, I don’t know if the machine is going to turn on or not,” added Portland.

“We’ve been in class, and the lights even just shoot purple, and then it’s off, and then it’s back to white,” said sophomore Aliya Dean.

“It’s not that the machine cannot be fixed, the problem is finding the parts to fix the machine. That’s the really scary part,” Portland said.

Being one out of four school districts in Pennsylvania with a planetarium and observatory, the Pottsville School Board is using the rest of the district’s COVID funds to replace everything under the dome, so students can continue learning about the beauty of space.

“I think that it’s so fun that when I go camping or hiking in an area where it’s starting to get dark, and there’s very little light pollution because we’re not near a city, and I can just see and appreciate the stars dazzling, it’s amazing,” said sophomore Charley Brode.

some of Portland’s students are so excited, they’re already planning to come back after the planetarium’s renovation.

“Port will be introducing a brand-new astronomy two class, which is astrophotography and stuff. And even though we can’t take it till we’re seniors, me and Aliya are definitely going to be back,” Brode said.

Check out WNEP’s YouTube channel.  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries

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This Year’s Photography Show by AIPAD Casts a Wide Net From Historic Images to NFTs—Here Are Some of the Highlights

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The Association of International Photography Art Dealers, commonly known as AIPAD, represents over 80 leading photography galleries from around the world, and for over 40 years has been dedicated to fostering and promoting the scholarship, exhibition, and market of fine art photography. Presented by AIPAD, the Photography Show returns for its 42nd edition in New York this month, running March 31 through April 2, 2023, at Center415. Earlier this year, AIPAD announced the appointment of Lydia Melamed Johnson as the new executive director. Of the forthcoming fair, Melamed Johnson said, “We’ve had an incredible response so far for the 2023 show, and I’m looking forward to being able to build on what we accomplished last year, including growing to welcome back guest exhibitors and publishers as we did at the Piers.”

An early initiative introduced by Melamed Johnson is the Associate Membership, an introductory membership that provides accessibility and support for emerging galleries that are less than five years old, which is currently the age of operation needed for full AIPAD membership. These associate members will be showing for the first time this year, alongside a roster of prestigious AIPAD gallery members. Together, 44 galleries will come together—from local to international—to present both new and historic museum-quality photography in addition to a range of new media, including photo-based art and NFTs.

Rodrigo Valenzuela, Case #1 (2022). Courtesy of Assembly, Houston.

Rodrigo Valenzuela, Case #1 (2022). Courtesy of Assembly, Houston.

One gallery that will be highlighting NFTs is Assembly, Houston, which will show the work of Rodrigo Valenzuela as both photographic prints and digital NFTs. Recognized for his images of collected industrial and mechanical objects against hazy backgrounds, through the presentation of Valenzuela’s work the gallery will assist collectors new to acquiring NFTs.

Estate of James Bidgood, Hanging Off Bed (Bobby Kendall), (mid-to-late 1960s/printed later). Courtesy of CLAMP, New York.

James Bidgood, Hanging Off Bed (Bobby Kendall) (mid-to-late 1960s/printed later). © Estate of James Bidgood. Courtesy of CLAMP, New York.

Other highlights of the forthcoming show include New York gallery Clamp‘s curated exhibition of queer portraiture, dated from the early 20th century through today, and Yancey Richardson’s presentation of Larry Sultan’s Pictures from Home, which will also be on view at the gallery and coinciding with the Broadway play Pictures from Home starring Nathan Lane. Visitors to the fair will also be able to discover some of the world’s most recognizable images, such as Henri Cartier-Bresson’s iconic Rue Mouggetard, Paris (1954) at Michael Hoppen Gallery, London.

Henri Cartier-Bresson, Rue Mouffetard, Paris (1954) © Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos. Courtesy Michael Hoppen Gallery, London.

Henri Cartier-Bresson, Rue Mouffetard, Paris (1954) © Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos. Courtesy Michael Hoppen Gallery, London.

Complementing the range of gallery presentations will be a special exhibition, “Highlights from the Archive: Celebrating the 10th Anniversary of MUUS Collection.” Centered on collecting a “quintessentially American photography archive from the 20th century,” the MUUS Collection exhibition will highlight the work of five photographers, André de Dienes, Fred W. McDarrah, Deborah Turbeville, Rosalind Fox Solomon, and Alfred Wertheimer. Tracing the similarities and distinctions between each photographer’s approach to portraiture, the show will bring together both iconic and lesser-known images, highlighting both the scope of the archive and showcasing these inimitable artists’ work.

Niv Rozenberg, Chrysler (day), (2019) Courtesy of Galerie Catherine et André Hug, Paris.

Niv Rozenberg, Chrysler (day) (2019). Courtesy of Galerie Catherine et André Hug, Paris.

As the longest-running exhibition dedicated to photography, the Photography Show presented by AIPAD is a yearly highlight for photography collectors and enthusiasts alike. With a full slate of new programming and exhibitors, the 2023 edition is not to be missed.

The Photography Show presented by AIPAD will be on view March 31–April 2, 2023, at Center415, New York.

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Afzal Karim’s Wildlife Photography Exhibition Receives Huge …

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(MENAFN- Bangladesh Monitor) Dhaka : On World Wildlife Day, renowned photographer Afzal Karim organised his second solo wildlife photography exhibition named Life in the Wild where he exhibited 93 beautiful photos of wildlife, nature and birds from our country as well as abroad.

The three-day long exhibition took place at the capital’s Gallery Chitrak from March 3-5, 2023, visited by several photography, art and nature enthusiasts.

Nature is made of wildlife, plants and many other elements of environment. People’s incognisance towards wildlife are putting them at risk and leading them towards extinction. Hence, nature is suffering from an imbalance.

Therefore, to protect wildlife and raise awareness among people, photographer Afzal Karim organised this exhibition.

‘We now see the youth suffering from severe depression. To prevent it, they should get more involved with nature and wildlife. They will be content taking photographs of beautiful wildlife and birds that our nature blesses us with,’ said Afzal Karim.

The dignitaries who attended the exhibition also urged everyone to work together in increasing awareness to protect the environment, nature and wildlife.

MENAFN16032023000163011034ID1105790024


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Astrophotographer Richard Whitehead Shoots Out-of-This-World Images From St. George | Visual Art | Seven Days

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click to enlarge The Jellyfish Nebula, a galactic supernova remnant approximately 5,000 light-years from Earth - COURTESY OF RICHARD WHITEHEAD

  • Courtesy of Richard Whitehead
  • The Jellyfish Nebula, a galactic supernova remnant approximately 5,000 light-years from Earth

Perusing Richard Whitehead’s photographs of the night sky, one can be forgiven for mistaking them for professional images captured by the Hubble or James Webb space telescopes. Whitehead’s online astrophotography gallery includes celestial structures more commonly captured by orbiting telescopes and large mountaintop observatories.

Among them: the zoologically named Horsehead, Tadpole, Pelican and Elephant’s Trunk nebulae; the spirals of the Whirlpool, Pinwheel and Andromeda galaxies; and other cosmic structures that offer clues to the origins of stars and solar systems, including the Wizard, Heart and Soul nebulae.

click to enlarge Richard Whitehaed - COURTESY OF RICHARD WHITEHEAD

  • Courtesy of Richard Whitehead
  • Richard Whitehaed

But all of Whitehead’s amateur photos were shot through comparably small, ground-based telescopes, sometimes in his front yard in St. George, other times in a New Mexico desert. And while Whitehead’s scopes are considerably more sophisticated — and expensive — than the kind children receive as holiday gifts, he noted that many of the heavenly bodies he’s photographed can be seen with a modest investment of time and money.

In fact, Whitehead’s passion for astrophotography is a relatively new hobby that he took up at the start of the pandemic. In just three years, the 61-year-old has become a self-taught expert on space photography, producing stellar images that circulate widely among space enthusiasts and researchers alike. Whitehead often receives professional accolades for his photos, and amateur astrophotographers around the world now contact him for advice.

While Whitehead has a website where he sells his prints emblazoned on hats, mugs and T-shirts, he’s not in it for the money.

“I like to think of myself as a visual artist,” he said. “I like the creative aspect of it, though I’m fascinated by the science, too.”

click to enlarge The Wizard Nebula - COURTESY OF RICHARD WHITEHEAD

  • Courtesy of Richard Whitehead
  • The Wizard Nebula

Whitehead, who runs a Burlington software company that he cofounded 25 years ago, lives alone in St. George with Herschel, his exuberant 6-month-old Australian labradoodle puppy, who resembles a teddy bear you’d win at a county fair. Amid the ample collection of musical instruments in Whitehead’s home — guitars, basses and drums — are framed prints of his space photography.

Many of those prints are quite large. They include one of Whitehead’s best photos to date: a stunningly vivid, 3-by-4-foot shot of the Jellyfish Nebula, captured in St. George during four virtually crystal clear nights. Last month, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration chose the image as its “Astronomy Picture of the Day” and posted it to its Facebook page — considered high praise among amateur astrophotographers.

Another image of Whitehead’s, of the Siamese Twins galaxies, was similarly recognized by the Italian astronomical society Gruppo Astrofili Galileo Galilei. Still other images have received accolades from the Amateur Astronomy Photo of the Day website, which receives thousands of submissions annually from photographers worldwide. Though few people get theirs posted, Whitehead has already had four of his photos featured on the site.

Astrophotography is more complicated than terrestrial photography and involves layering multiple frames to produce the final image. Whereas conventional photography typically entails shutter speeds of tenths, hundredths or thousandths of a second, astrophotography involves stacking dozens of images, each created using 20- to 30-minute exposures, often shot over multiple nights.

Once Whitehead has gathered all that raw digital data, he processes it using various software, including Adobe Photoshop and PixInsight. The latter is an astrophotography program that aligns the stars in the overlapping images and eliminates unwanted “noise” created by thermal and atmospheric disturbances.

Whitehead has five telescopes. Usually, though, he shoots his Vermont-based images through a 106-millimeter (just over four inches) refractor scope mounted on a tripod on his front lawn. A refractor scope has a long optical tube with a convex glass lens at one end. Light from the sky enters through that lens, then exits through the eyepiece or camera shutter. (Whitehead does all of his viewing on a computer.)

The Pleiades, aka the Seven Sisters, a star cluster about 444 light-years from Earth and visible to the naked eye - COURTESY OF RICHARD WHITEHEAD

  • Courtesy of Richard Whitehead
  • The Pleiades, aka the Seven Sisters, a star cluster about 444 light-years from Earth and visible to the naked eye

In all, his Vermont-based kit, including the telescope, tripod, filters, motor, camera and computer link, cost him about $50,000. While he acknowledged that’s a lot of money, he added, “When I think I’m ridiculous, I look at the guy who spent half a million.”

Whitehead also rents space at a professional telescope hosting facility in a New Mexico desert. “They get about 300 clear nights a year, as opposed to Vermont, which gets about 20,” he said. “It can be good here, but it’s very hit or miss.” In New Mexico, he houses his reflecting telescope, which uses curved mirrors rather than lenses to capture and focus the light. Like Whitehead’s Vermont-based scope, he controls the reflector scope in New Mexico remotely via a laptop in Vermont.

Whitehead had no formal education in astronomy or astrophysics, but he grew up surrounded by high-tech gadgetry. He was born and raised in England, in a small rural town in the East Midlands. Whitehead’s father, a decorated military radio operator during World War II, ran a maritime radio station and was also a ham radio enthusiast.

“There were always wires and equipment around the house, which is a bit like me,” he said. “So I guess I inherited that.”

As a child, Whitehead had a small backyard telescope for stargazing, and his small rural hometown of about 5,000 people had very little light pollution. Whitehead was also a fan of Sir Patrick Moore, the famous British astronomer who for years had a BBC television show called “The Sky at Night.” Whitehead described him as a 1960s version of Neil deGrasse Tyson.

click to enlarge The Andromeda Galaxy, the Milky Way's nearest neighbor, approximately 2.5 million light-years from Earth - COURTESY OF RICHARD WHITEHEAD

  • Courtesy of Richard Whitehead
  • The Andromeda Galaxy, the Milky Way’s nearest neighbor, approximately 2.5 million light-years from Earth

Whitehead attended university, where he received a degree in radiography, then spent three years working as a medical X-ray technician. Feeling limited by the job, he changed careers to sales and marketing for the pharmaceutical industry. Then, in the late 1990s, he cofounded an analytical software firm called CSL Software Solutions. With clients in the Northeast, and having enjoyed several previous visits to Vermont, Whitehead moved the company to Burlington in 2006.

Already an avid amateur photographer, Whitehead had a small telescope that he used only rarely for stargazing prior to 2020. When the pandemic hit, he started playing around with the telescope again, then bought himself a small star tracker that follows the movement of celestial objects across the night sky.

Bored one night during the lockdown, Whitehead aimed his telescope toward the Orion Nebula and shot some photos using 30-second to one-minute exposures. Though his first one was “a rubbish image,” Whitehead said, its colors inspired him to create better ones.

“And that was the start of the addiction,” he added.

Soon, Whitehead upgraded to an 11-inch reflector scope, which enabled him to shoot much sharper images of galaxies and nebulae. (He’s less interested in photographing planets but has some good images of the moon and comets.) Much of the processing software Whitehead needed was available online for free. Numerous catalogs for locating and identifying celestial objects are also available online. Whitehead integrated his expertise in databases, which he acquired as a software developer, into his newfound pastime.

How does artistry enter the cosmic picture? As Whitehead explained, some of the creativity is similar to that of conventional photography: framing the subject, deciding on the picture’s depth of field, and choosing the right shutter speeds and filters. Whitehead uses very narrow filters — a mere three nanometers wide — that enable his telescope to peer through clouds of dust in space.

In astrophotography, Whitehead explained, the photographer also has the ability to change the colors that appear in the final image. The so-called “Hubble Palette,” made famous by the Hubble Space Telescope, is merely a convention that NASA developed: blues represent the presence of oxygen, oranges and reds the presence of hydrogen, yellows for sulfur, and so on for other elements. However, as Whitehead pointed out, amateur astrophotographers can choose completely different colors to represent those elements, rendering familiar objects in space in new ways.

Not all of Whitehead’s subjects have been photographed countless times before. He spent 30 hours photographing the Bear Claw Nebula, of which, he said, there’s only a handful of other images online, and “none of them particularly great.

“Scientific images aren’t necessarily pretty images,” he added.

Naturally, when photographing objects millions of light-years away, astrophotographers still encounter obstacles in their own neighborhood, from heavy cloud cover and light pollution to the proliferation of satellites, such as Starlink, which are highly reflective. While Whitehead can use software to eliminate some of the trails and reflections created by passing aircraft, satellites and meteors, often he has to throw away those images and take new ones.

Not all unexpected images are unwanted. In Whitehead’s Jellyfish Nebula, for example, he captured something he didn’t expect and couldn’t identify, which may be a planetary nebula, a region of cosmic dust and gas created by a dying star. And in 2021, while photographing Messier 78, a nebula in the constellation Orion, Whitehead caught Herbig-Haro objects, which form when gas ejected by young stars collides with clouds of other gas and dust at high speeds. In his photo, they appear as narrow red jets.

While Whitehead’s images have caught the attention of some professional astronomers and researchers, most of his fans are amateur space enthusiasts like himself, who enjoy pondering the vastness of the universe and our place in it.

“Whatever’s going on in the world,” he said, “you can look up at the sky and realize how small and insignificant we are.”

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20 Funny And Bizarre Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together In Weird Positions

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Here are the 20 funny and bizarre photos of cats sleeping together in weird positions. Cats are well known for their ability to sleep anywhere, at any time, in any position. And when two cats decide to snuggle up together for a nap, things can get pretty interesting. Here are some funny and bizarre photos of cats sleeping together in weird positions that will make you smile.

In conclusion, cats are truly amazing creatures, and their ability to sleep in weird positions is just one of their many talents. Whether they are snuggled up together or sleeping on their own, cats are always entertaining and amusing to watch. So the next time you see your cat sleeping in a strange position, take a picture and share it with the world – you never know who else might find it funny and bizarre.

Here in this gallery you can find 20 funny and best photos of cats sleeping together. All photos are linked and lead to the sources from which they were taken. Please feel free to explore further works of these photographers on their collections or their personal sites.

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

Image Source: Imgur

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

Image Source: lifonaut

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

Image Source: reddit.com

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

Image Source: imgur.com

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

Image Source: Imgur

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

Image Source: NARWHAL_POTATO

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

Image Source: fuji_ayako

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

Image Source: Imgur

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

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Funny Photos Of Cats Sleeping Together

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Image Source: RegEvrydayNormlFungi

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Image Source: _punk_ass_

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Like nature photography? The Aquarium of the Pacific has a contest just for you

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A couple on a bridge dances to live music in front of the Blue Cavern tank at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach on Friday, Feb. 15, 2019. The Aquarium is celebrating New Year’s Eve with a daytime event aimed at young kids this year.


© Scott Varley, Daily Breeze/The Orange County Register/TNS
A couple on a bridge dances to live music in front of the Blue Cavern tank at the Aquarium of the Pacific in Long Beach on Friday, Feb. 15, 2019. The Aquarium is celebrating New Year’s Eve with a daytime event aimed at young kids this year.

The Aquarium of the Pacific, nestled in the heart of Shoreline Village, is celebrating its 25th anniversary throughout 2023 — and the iconic venue wants Southland residents to join in by snapping photos that represent a connection with the natural world.

The Long Beach aquarium‘s “Connecting to Nature” photo contest will accept submissions through April, the organization said in an announcement this week. Contestants are encouraged to share a photo highlighting their special connection to the diverse nature that exists across Southern California.

“Suggestions include your favorite parks, beaches, hikes, dive sites, wildlife viewing, or even your own backyard,” the announcement said, “anywhere you connect to nature.”

The top 10 photos will be featured in an aquarium exhibit from May 26 to Dec. 31, during the institution’s 25th anniversary celebration. The top three winners will also get cash prizes of $500, $250 and $100, respectively.

Anyone is allowed to submit a photo for the contest — aside from aquarium employees, volunteers and board members, the Tuesday, March 14, announcement said.

Visit aquariumofpacific.org to submit your photo to the contest. All entries are due by 5 p.m. April 10.

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©2023 MediaNews Group, Inc. Visit ocregister.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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Southern Illinois astrophotographer captures the night sky in these incredible images

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Few things in this world are more beautiful than the night sky. But, because of the ever increasing light pollution, few have seen the night sky in all its photogenic glory. One local man is putting his technical expertise to use bringing heavenly beauty to Southern Illinois. 

“I think that people really enjoy seeing my astrophotography because it is getting harder and harder to experience,” said John O’Connell, a local astrophotographer and teacher, who is also a PhD student in zoology at SIU that centers on digital mapping and aerial imagery. “I am lucky to live in Southern Illinois where light pollution is relatively low compared to major cities, but it still has enough that it washes out our view of many stars.”

O’Connell says that light pollution is only continuing to increase around the world, but with long exposures and advanced photo processing, he says he can show people what they are missing with their eyes.”

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And what the naked eye misses is awesome. O’Connell’s astro-art takes its inspiration from the artist’s enthusiasm for the night sky. “There might be as many reasons to enjoy astrophotography as there are stars in the sky, but it does have several aspects that I particularly enjoy. First, I grew up in Miami, FL where I could count the stars. For me to walk outside in Southern Illinois and see so many stars that I could never dream of counting them all just blows me away every time,” O’Connell said. 

Take, for instance, his “Grassy Bay Milky Way” which is featured this month at the Artspace 304 gallery, in the exhibit “Nature,” which showcases the beauty of Southern Illinois in a variety of media. The scene immerses you literally right in the water of the Crab Orchard Lake, and among the lotus fields which sprung up during the once-in-a-decade lowering of the water levels. O’Connell describes how he enjoyed exploring the banks with his photography colleagues by boat, but decided to get a closer look.  

“I then walked about 30 yards from the boat in knee-to-waist deep muck with about 6 inches of water on top. Of course, I forgot something in the boat and had to do the trip twice! I set my tripod with the camera close to the water to capture the trio of lotus at the bottom of the image complete with the water drops that were beaded up on top,” O’Connell said. 

What was captured over dozens of exposures and several panoramic stitching’s is a cosmic vision from the very humble but mystical lotus leaves of Southern Illinois. Light dances off the leaves as your eye traces them into infinity to the horizon, a darkened mass of trees in the distance. Just there at the darkest point of the photograph, a soothing orange glow rises up from the dark horizon into a galactic display of the Milky Way stood on end, pointing higher and higher as if to summon our vision beyond Southern Illinois lowlands whence it originated to the stars above and beyond to the furthest reaches of reality. The photograph is simply a masterpiece of art, both technically flawless and aesthetically rich, and, what’s most important, spiritually enlightening. We are called from the mud, the slime of the earth, to the stars, or from humility to a homeland among the stars.  

O’Connell has honed his photography art through countless hours reading and watching video tutorials, and trial and error, and now he wants to share his proven knowledge with others, even if it costs him.  

“I know that there are many people who want to capture the amazing night sky in Southern Illinois, so I put together a workshop, along with some fellow night photographers, to help people get started in that endeavor. Our focus will be on landscape astrophotography in particular, meaning pairing the sky with a foreground scene. My goal is that everyone will have the tools that they need to go out on their own and capture the Milky Way,” O’Connell said, who jokes that it is somewhat risky sharing his knowledge, because he is training tomorrow’s competition, but he says he maintains a collaborative and supportive mentality nevertheless. “Further, I liken photography to a journey, one in which I can give people some skills to help them navigate their own route and to their own goals, but not turn-by-turn directions to duplicate my work or style. Besides, where’s the fun in that?!”

O’Connell says that he hopes his art brings the viewer joy, happy memories, calm, wonder, or other pleasant feelings – like, for this viewer, spiritual enlightenment.    

“I love hearing from people when I am able to evoke positive emotions in them through my photography. There are plenty of worries in the world, so I hope that my art, whether purchased as a print or enjoyed for free on Facebook, helps make their day better.”

For those who just want to learn photography in general, O’Connell also hosts a free Beginner Outdoor Photography workshops at the Giant City State Park visitor’s center every few months, the next one being July 8. With limited seats are reservations are required, so contact Giant City State Park to claim a spot: (618) 457-4836.

For information about O’Connell’s advanced astrophotography course, go to his website https://www.johnoconnellphotography.com/home or message him on his Facebook, JohnOConnellPhotography, or, if for nothing else, to see this local artist’s amazing photographs!  

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The Creative Whiz Behind Our Award-Winning Photography – Texas Monthly

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Whether or not a picture is worth a thousand words, the right one can make a thousand words—or even ten thousand—a lot more interesting to read. That’s why, from its launch fifty years ago, Texas Monthly has published the work of the state’s best photographers, plus a few with Lone Star roots who have been drawn to New York City or Los Angeles and are glad to come home occasionally to shoot for us. Our database of freelance photojournalists numbers more than five hundred, who specialize in everything from interiors to the outdoors, food, and “funky light.” Claire Hogan, our photo editor, observes that “we know what areas each photographer specializes in and enjoys, but I also like to pitch them assignments that stretch them a bit and surprise our readers.”

Claire’s approach regularly wins praise from those readers, and in February it was recognized by the National Magazine Awards, the Oscars of our industry. The image she assigned and directed for last October’s cover, on the state’s most interesting roadside attractions, was named the best service and lifestyle photo published by any U.S. magazine in 2022. That image, shown on this page, was shot by longtime contributor Jeff Wilson as part of a photo essay capturing giant statues of roadrunners, armadillos, and such that he had spotted during long drives around the state. We assigned one of our wittiest wordsmiths, senior editor Emily McCullar, to visit the attractions and interview their creators. “It was,” Claire says, “one of those perfect marriages of story, writer, and photographer.”

Our photo team scored another honor in the National Magazine Awards, as a finalist in the profile-photography category, for a poolside shot of social media “grandfluencer” Irvin Randle, a fit, sharp-dressing sixty-year-old Houston schoolteacher known as “Mr. Steal Your Grandma.” That portrait, also published in our October 2022 issue, was taken by Peter Yang, a University of Texas at Austin graduate now based in Los Angeles.

Claire is herself a UT alum, having earned a degree in journalism with an emphasis on photography. She inherited a passion for the news from her mother, who worked as community-relations coordinator for the late, lamented Dallas Times Herald. Claire got hooked on photography and photo editing as a yearbook editor at her high school in Houston and through a couple of summer expeditions that her school arranged with National Geographic, in Greece, Italy, and Tanzania. “I found I enjoyed not only taking photos,” Claire says, “but also putting all the pieces together”—choosing photographers, making assignments, directing shots, and editing photos.


Like Claire, our colleague J. K. Nickell works mostly behind the scenes, as one of the country’s finest editors of feature stories. He crafts our longer assignments, works with writers to plan their reporting, and helps them organize and hone their writing. For this issue, however, J.K. decided to do some writing of his own, on a topic close to his heart: education reform. 

He started his career as a public schoolteacher and coach in Melissa, forty miles northeast of downtown Dallas. There he saw that many kids’ educational attainment was held back by factors beyond the control of their teachers: homelessness, hunger, drug use and violence in the child’s neighborhood or home, parents who worked multiple jobs and were seldom around for homework help. “Too many elected officials expect the public schools to be the panacea for all of society’s problems,” J.K. says, “but they don’t fund the schools for that mission, and they denounce and undermine them when they inevitably fall short.”

J.K.’s story focuses on a small but promising program in Dallas, launched by a Black entrepreneur, that shows what a holistic approach to urban education might look like. I hope you find it as inspiring as I did and that you enjoy the rest of this issue of Texas Monthly.

This article originally appeared in the April 2023 issue of Texas Monthly with the headline “Behind the Scenes.” Subscribe today.

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Duke Kunshan Professor Named Nature Photographer of the Year

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Accepting her award during a Feb. 24 ceremony, Li said photography plays an important role in conservation and that in recent years she had been increasingly active in capturing animals on film to support her work.

“Taking photographs of the natural world helps me to more effectively communicate the significance of scientific findings and the urgency of our conservation efforts,” she said.

“They inadvertently create a connection between us and nature, changing our perception of it and even our expectations of ourselves.”

The professor told the ceremony that she had been inspired as a child to pursue a conservation career by a picture of Peking University’s Dr. Lu Zhi studying giant pandas in the wild.

The young Li spotted the picture hanging on the wall during a visit to the university as part of a middle school biology competition.

Li receives praise from Lu Zhi and Jane Goodall at the ceremony

Years later, she was presented her latest award by Zhi herself — who in turn credits chimpanzee expert Dr. Jane Goodall with influencing her own career — in the hope that Li would continue the chain of high-achieving conservationists inspiring the next generation of women into the field.

Goodall, who is one of the world’s most admired conservationists and a member of the competition’s academic committee, said she was “extremely impressed” by the way Li combined research and “wonderful” photography.

“You’ve had to shoot film and conduct research often in difficult conditions and you’ve had to succeed in a world where women are typically in the minority,” she told Li.

“I hope that this competition and your example will encourage more people — especially young people, including young women — to become involved in wildlife research and conservation.”

The photography prize, awarded by a jury of renowned photographers, nature publication editors and environmental experts, is the latest accolade to adorn Li’s mantelpiece.

Her DKU team last year received a Pineapple Science Award for its research into bird-window collisions.

Li, who is also an assistant professor at Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment, worked as a science advisor for the Disney nature documentary “Born in China” and holds editor positions at several conservation journals.

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