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Epson Red Sea 2008 Coverage- Award Ceremony |
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Sharon Rainis photos: Fabrice Boisser I had the privilege to host the winning ceremony, together with a talented and well appreciated colleague, Razi Livnat. Both of us were very much involved with documenting the event during the week, getting to know the participants and sharing their hopes and expectations. Therefore we found ourselves as excited as the participants themselves were when the ceremony began. Aside from announcing the winners, the ceremony also featured two lotteries, in which 10 printers and 2 projectors were allotted among all competition participants. This was a surprise planned ahead to provide many other participants with a chance to go back home with a prize, but it was definitely also part of the “build up” in the ceremony, as it delayed the winners announcements a little bit more. After all, when prizes are valued as more than $80,000, one has every reason in the world to create a build up!
Although this was the Epson Red Sea competition, obviously most of the photographers focused on capturing images of fish rather than printers. Well, most of them. Not all. As an underwater photographer with a team which constantly looks for reasons to (professionally) fool around, we decided to go for the Epson Red Sea 2008 theme. We simply unplugged the first Epson printer we had found and took it for its very first (and last) dive. Let’s just say that working on its buoyancy skills was quite a challenge…
Environmental conservation concerns seemed to draw much attention during this event and enjoyed the warmth of the spotlights. When Roni Soffer, head of the judges, came up on the stage to announce the Judge’s prize, he began by introducing the story behind the scenes. He spoke about the judges’ initial choice, an excellent picture of a fish on a background that somehow seemed, well, for the sake of this report let’s call it “unnatural”. The concerned judges then opened the folder in which all images of the photographer were uploaded in a sequence, and found out that the fish was somehow forced to swim to a different location, a location which the photographer believed will suit him more as a background. Obviously, this image was disqualified and the photographer was fined. I don’t want to sound like a hypocrite here, because nobody’s perfect, but I would like to state that one cannot be a nature photographer without sharing great respect to the nature. The sea is not our own private studio, and we should remember to act according to what we really are there, visitors. The fact that we are usually surrounded underwater by helpless creatures which cannot fight back, does not entitle us to do as much as we please. I am glad that whoever broke the rules this year took steps to implement that this was unforgivably wrong, but I hope we will not encounter such behaviors in next year’s competition.
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