John Stanmeyer (born March 1964), is an American photojournalist based in Otis, Massachusetts. He is one of the founders of VII Photo Agency. Stanmeyer has received the World Press Photo of the Year,[1] Robert Capa Gold Medal, Magazine Photographer of the Year from Pictures of the Year International,[citation needed] and a National Magazine Award for Photojournalism.[citation needed]
Life and work
editHis career began at the Tampa Tribune in Tampa, Florida where he began working on international assignments traveling to various African and European countries and India. He then shifted his focus to freelance work on Asian and Middle-Eastern events. His work has centered on Asian and Middle-Eastern political and human rights issues for the past 11 years, and more recently on the environment and sustainability.
He has contributed to Time and National Geographic.[citation needed]
In 2016, along with Anush Babajanyan and Serra Akcan, he started Bridging Stories, a photography training programme for Turks and Armenians to take and share pictures of their daily life on Instagram, in order to promote understanding between their peoples.[2]
Book
edit- Island of the Spirits. Afterhours, 2010. ISBN 978-6029750713.
Awards
edit- 1999: Robert Capa Gold Medal for "The Killing of Bernardino Guterres in Dili, East Timor", SABA for Time.[3]
- 2008: National Magazine Award for Photojournalism.[citation needed]
- 2013: World Press Photo of the Year from World Press Photo, Amsterdam, for a photograph of African migrants on the shore of Djibouti city at night.[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b John Stanmeyer, worldpressphoto.org, retrieved 14 February 2014
- ^ James Estrin (24 January 2017). "Building Bridges Between Turkey and Armenia". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
- ^ Seno, Alexandra A. (20 December 2010). "A Photographer's View of Balinese Rituals". WSJ. Retrieved 2016-06-19.
Robert Capa Gold Medal award in 1999
External links
edit- Official website
- John Stanmeyer at viiphoto.com
- John Stanmeyer at IMDb