By Admin in Photography
“Blackburnian Warbler” by Mathew Malwitz, Audubon Photography Awards, 2024 Grand Prize Winner. Promised Land State Park, Pennsylvania, USA
2024 marks the 15th year of the annual Audubon Photography Awards, which garnered over 2,300 entrants from all 50 states, Washington D.C., and 10 areas in Canada. Highlighting a wide range of skills from youth photographers to professional photojournalists, each image reveals the distinctive beauty of birds. From a Forster Tern spiraling through the air to a Sedge Wren grasping two long stems as if they were stilts, everyday spectacles are masterfully captured in high resolution.
New this year, the Birds in Landscapes Prize showcases the relationship between avians and their environments. Kevin Lohman’s “California Quail” won this special division, capturing the feathered creature perched atop a small bush in a lush West Coast field.
Winning photographers will be featured in the Summer 2024 edition of Audubon magazine, and in the meantime, you can find our favorite images below and delve into the full collection on the contest’s website.
“Black-capped Chickadee and Broad-leaf Cattail” by Linda Scher, Audubon Photography Awards, 2024 Plants For Birds Winner. Wood Lake Nature Center, Richfield, Minnesota, USA
“Great-tailed Grackle” by Tristan Vratil, Audubon Photography Awards, 2024 Amateur Winner. Corner of Slaughter Lane and Congress Avenue, Austin, Texas, USA
“Forster’s Tern” by Kevin Lohman, Audubon Photography Awards, 2024 Professional Honorable Mention. Shoreline Lake, Mountain View, California, USA
“California Quail” by Kevin Lohman, Audubon Photography Awards, 2024 Birds in Landscapes Prize Winner. Santa Cruz, California, USA
“Sedge Wren and Gray-head Coneflower” by Trisha Snider, Audubon Photography Awards, 2024 Plants For Birds Honorable Mention. John E Pearce Provincial Park, Wallacetown, Ontario, Canada
“Wild Turkey” by Travis Potter, Audubon Photography Awards, 2024 Female Bird Prize Winner. Travis Potter/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Female Bird Prize Winner
“Red-necked Grebe” by Edwin Liu, Audubon Photography Awards, 2024 Youth Honorable Mention. Colonel Samuel Smith Park, Etobicoke, ON, Canada
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By Admin in Photography
By Nate Freeman
June 20, 2024

Tyler Mitchell has been making art at a breakneck pace since 2018, when he photographed Beyoncé for Vogue and became the first Black photographer to lens the cover. He joined the roster of Jack Shainman in 2020 and launched two New York exhibitions across its two Chelsea galleries in 2021. His early shows generated a great amount of excitement about the entire medium of photography, which has in recent years taken a back seat in white cubes and auction houses to painting—especially because Mitchell’s images are brimming with emotion, bursting out of the frames.

And then in late 2022, Mitchell had a show at the Gagosian empire’s outpost on Davies Street in London’s Mayfair, opening in the primo slot during Frieze. The rollicking first-night celebration for his new series of diptychs spilled out into the streets, and guests included artists such as Amy Sherald and Lauren Halsey, then British Vogue editor Edward Enninful, and CNN fixture Christiane Amanpour. By the time guests arrived at the dinner at a posh members club, the works had all sold.
But even with that brisk ascent, the summer of 2024 is turning out to be a landmark season for the 29-year-old.
“We’re going to be on two continents in the same month and installing and opening big shows—and let’s hope that we survive to the end,” Mitchell told me during a brief moment of calm before the summer began. “I’m just excited to see the reactions to the work and to see how it might move people. And it feels like an introduction of who I am.”
Earlier this month a show at the German photography and visual media institution C/O Berlin officially became Mitchell’s first solo outing in the country—over 3,000 people came through the gallery’s home within what was previously the Amerika Haus during the opening on June 1. Mitchell’s “Wish This Was Real” includes work from 2015 to now, but there’s also a section of curated work by Mitchell’s friends and contemporaries, including Rashid Johnson, Garrett Bradley, Grace Wales Bonner, and Loretta Pettway Bennett of the Gee’s Bend Quiltmakers.

“I wanted to put my work in proximity of other practitioners, for a German audience, to convey the lineage of not only Black image makers and photographers, but Black artists and the multiple modes of expression that are possible around contemporary ideas of Black life,” he said.
But especially close to Mitchell’s heart is the show “Tyler Mitchell: Idyllic Space,” opening this week at the High Museum of Art in his native Atlanta—a show that will focus on how, even though his studio’s in New York, the ethos of his image making is rooted in the American South.
“It’s the city I grew up in, the museum that I grew up going to as a kid, so when you have that, it’s a completely different story to tell,” he said. “The High Museum has been a huge, huge, huge goal of mine since I started showing.”
The show also includes what Mitchell calls a sculptural piece consisting of images all produced as part of a conceptual nod to the kind of studio photography pioneered by the Harlem Renaissance artist James Van Der Zee—one that amounts to a sprawling investigation of a slice of the Black community in Atlanta. Working within the context of traditional studio portraiture, Mitchell photographed 25 families involved in the long-standing local chapter of the Jack and Jill of America, the oldest African American–led nonprofit organization in the country. Jack and Jill is a deeply important developmental force for local Black youth, but Mitchell was fascinated by the fact that it still practices outmoded social functions such as debutante and cotillion balls and encouraged members to approach the portrait sittings “presenting themselves to me as they want.”

“So it becomes this kind of strange love letter to the community I grew up in, but also a sort of critique, a sort of critique of respectability and presentation as it relates to Black Southern life, the sort of gentleness and politeness that lays underneath the way we choose to present ourselves,” he said. “And that is all kind of going on underneath the surface of these portraits of those families.”
The show is a big deal not just for Mitchell, but for the High Museum itself. The artist has spent the last few years working with senior curator of modern and contemporary art Michael Rooks to do something groundbreaking: He’ll have the first-ever full photography show installed in the museum’s Stent Wing Special Exhibition galleries.
“Not that anything’s wrong with the photography galleries in the museum, but I often push back against the idea that, as a photographer, we’re sort of relegated to a dark underlit basement,” he said. “Seeing my show in proximity to, let’s just say, a painting show next door, or the European collections next door, could create some interesting conflicts and dialogues.”
By Admin in Photography
Blackburnian Warbler by Mathew Malwitz/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Grand Prize Winner
Location: Promised Land State Park, Pennsylvania, USA
“Two Blackburnian Warblers face each other in profile; their gray and white wings outstretched behind them. Their yellow heads and orange necks stand out against a blurred gray background, and their bills and feet are entangled.”
Now in its 15th year, the Audubon Photography Awards is celebrating the magic of bird photography. Run by the National Audubon Society, the competition is open to professional and amateur photographers of all ages. This year, Mathew Malwitz came away with the top prize for his delightful portrait of two Blackburnian warblers facing each other in a wonderful symmetrical pose.
Last year’s grand prize winner, Liron Gertsman, was once again celebrated this year. His interesting photo of a flock of willow ptarmigans in flight, with their white feathers melting into the white sky, won the professional category. These winning entries were chosen from more than 2,300 entrants from all 50 U.S. states, nine Canadian provinces, and one territory.
The photo contest has also expanded its scope, adding the Birds in Landscapes Prize for the first time. Designed to draw attention to how birds connect with their broader surroundings, the inaugural prize was handed out to Kevin Lohman for an atmospheric photo of a California quail perched on a small bush in a field.
Sadly, birds like the California quail and the Blackburnian warbler are facing increasing obstacles to their survival. The National Audubon Society’s climate science report, Survival by Degrees, states that two-thirds of North American birds are facing extinction due to climate change. A special climate change visualizer even lets you see how the birds in your area will be impacted.
By taking in these photos and learning more about what the future holds, there’s even more motivation to make the necessary changes on a small and large scale to delay the effects of climate change.

Forster’s Tern by Kevin Lohman/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Professional Honorable Mention
Location: Shoreline Lake, Mountain View, California, USA
“A Forster’s Tern is in the air, its head turned almost 180 degrees so that its bill is pointing almost straight up, and its tail is twisted. The bird’s outstretched wings give the impression the bird is floating upside down. Water droplets appear in a stream from the bird’s bill and also below it.”

Willow Ptarmigan by Liron Gertsman/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Professional Winner
Location: Kluane National Park, Yukon, Canada
“Seven Willow Ptarmigan are staggered throughout the image. Each is in various stages of flight. Their white bodies blend in with the completely white background; only their black eyes, bills, and tail feathers stand out.”

Barred Owl by Erin Boisvert/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Amateur Honorable Mention
Location: Deep Brook Preserve. Newtown, CT, USA
“A Barred Owl hangs upside down from a thin tree branch, its body horizontal, its face turned and looking at the camera. Above it hangs a squirrel on a branch. Its head is nearly completely severed and is held in the owl’s talons. Its fur is bloodied.”

Red-necked Grebe by Edwin Liu/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Youth Honorable Mention
Location: Colonel Samuel Smith Park, Etobicoke, ON, Canada
“Two adult Red-necked Grebes face each other in the water. The entire grebe’s body on the right is visible, and two black and white-headed chicks sit on its back. One is leaning to receive a small fish from the bill of the parent.”

Sedge Wren and Gray-head Coneflower by Trisha Snider/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Plants For Birds Honorable Mention
Location: John E Pearce Provincial Park, Wallacetown, Ontario, Canada
“A tiny russet brown Sedge Wren grasps two long, parallel stems as if they were stilts. The bird’s head looks to the left of the frame. Green grasses surround the bird, and yellow flowers are at the bottom of the image.”

American Kestrel by Parham Pourahmad/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Youth Winner
Location: Calero County Park, San Jose, California, USA
“An American Kestrel stands on a post in profile, and a male kestrel is on her back with his wings stretched behind him. The birds are both in profile facing the left of the frame, the male above appearing to be an extension of the female below.”

Black-capped Chickadee and Broad-leaf Cattail by Linda Scher/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Plants For Birds Winner
Location: Wood Lake Nature Center, Richfield, Minnesota, USA
“A Black-capped Chickadee clings to a single beige hook-shaped stem filled with seeds. The bird’s black legs appear to be spread at a 90-degree angle to hold the stem. The bird’s black bill is full of seeds.”

Wild Turkey by Travis Potter/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Female Bird Prize Winner
Location: Roseville, Minnesota, USA
“A female Wild Turkey stands in profile, and her head is held high and wings are fanned out behind her. She stands between railroad tracks littered with leaves that extend into the distance.”

Common Gallinule by Douglas DeFelice/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Fisher Prize Winner
Location: Tarpon Springs, FL
“A Common Gallinule’s green feet stick straight out of the surface of water, while its body is submerged and not visible. Splashes of water are outlined in gold against a black background and dark surface, making it difficult to distinguish between the feet and water.”

California Quail by Kevin Lohman/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Birds in Landscapes Prize Winner
Location: Santa Cruz, California, USA
“A California Quail perches on top of a small bush in a field. One row of bushes and trees in the foreground is in focus, along with the quail, while other bushes are out of focus or blurred. The scene is a muted brown and orange, with layers of light and dark.”

Great-tailed Grackle by Tristan Vratil/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Amateur Winner
Location: Corner of Slaughter Lane and Congress Avenue, Austin, Texas, USA
“Silhouetted grackles perch on power lines that bisect the image, with their tails nearly all pointing in the same direction. The sky is purple and pink. Through the whole of the photo are blurry figures of grackles flying through the air.”
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