Insight Investment Astronomy Photographer of the Year
Interesting exhibition at the National Maritime Museum of the 31 prize winning entries in
this completion for astronomical photographs and highlights entries from the
previous three years.
The categories in
this competition and therefore themes in this show were clearly laid out. The
pictures were beautiful displayed as back lit images on light boxes and each
picture included good commentaries with a quote from the photographs and
another from a judge. There were also technical details of how the picture was
taken for the geeks.
I tended to
prefer the works which included some reference to the earth or people. The deep
space images were fascinating but as images looked like abstract art and were
hard to understand.
My highlights
included Mark McNeil’s of the sky through a gap in Hadrian’s Wall with a real
sense of the ancient about it and Andrew Whyte’s of the Milky Way over a
housing estate in Sussex. However my favourite was Brad Goldpaint’s of a rocky
valley in Utah which made a sublime landscape with the earth and sky competing
to be the most monumental. It reminded me of something by Ansel Adams. A close
runner as favourite was Dani Caxete’s image of the space station crossing the
sun. At first glance the space station looked like a flay.
Closes on 4 May
2019
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