Richard CanonNews / Thursday, November 8, 2018 / Categories: News, Canon General News This post may contain affiliate links(s). An affiliate link means I may earn advertising/referral fees if you make a purchase through my link, without any additional cost to you. It helps to keep this site afloat. Thank you in advance for your support. If you like what we do here, maybe buy me a coffee. Canon announces the Grand Prize winner for its New Cosmos of Photography 2018 (41st edition) photo competition You can go see the images and further information on the New Cosmos of Photography website TOKYO, November 5, 2018—Mr. Song-Nian Ang, for his work "Hanging Heavy On My Eyes," was declared the Grand Prize winner of Canon's New Cosmos of Photography 2018 (41st edition) photo competition at a public meeting of the Grand Prize selection committee held at the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum on Friday, November 2. The New Cosmos of Photography accepted entries for the 2018 competition from April 18 to June 13, attracting 1,992 submissions from individuals and groups both inside and outside Japan. From those entrants seven Excellence Award winners and 12 Honorable Mention Award winners were selected by the Excellence Award Selection Committee. The Excellence Award winners, as Grand Prize candidates, attended a public meeting of the Grand Prize selection committee held on November 2. Each candidate gave a presentation and faced questioning by the selection committee, after which the committee convened and chose Mr. Ang as the Grand Prize winner. In addition to ¥1 million (approx. US$ 8,840) in prize money, Mr. Ang was awarded a Canon EOS R mirrorless camera and RF24-105mm F4 L IS USM lens (released on October 25, 2018) and the right to hold an exhibit of new work at the New Cosmos of Photography 2019 Tokyo Exhibition to be held in fall of next year. Details of the Grand Prize public selection committee meeting will be made available on the New Cosmos of Photography website. The New Cosmos of Photography 2018 Tokyo Exhibition of Excellence Award winners, including Grand Prize winner Mr. Ang, and Honorable Mention Award winners will continue until November 25 (Sunday) at the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum. The New Cosmos of Photography is Canon's cultural support project to discover, nurture, and support new photographers who pursue new possibilities in creative photographic expression. The annual contest, launched in 1991, has been open to the public regardless of the age or nationality of entrants or the number or format of entered works. As such, the contest encourages the creation of original works that push the boundaries of photography's potential and systematically assists and nurtures award winners through exhibitions and published collections of their winning works as well as through publicity on the New Cosmos of Photography website. To date, the New Cosmos of Photography contest has accepted 29,398 entries from both individuals and groups, and has turned out a great number of outstanding photographers who are enjoying widespread success around the world. As a result, the contest has come to be regarded today as a gateway to success for new photographers. About the winning entry "Hanging Heavy On My Eyes documents the recurring haze situation in Singapore and its region of prolonged haze spells due to increased forest fires for palm oil plantations in neighbouring Sumatra, Indonesia, throughout the entire year of 2016. Employing the photograph's indexical quality in literal sense, the artist translates the daily records of the Pollutant Standard Index's particulate matter 2.5 (PM2.5) from Singapore's National Environment Agency into a traditional wet dark room printing process, resulting in a range of gradated photo prints, displayed in a monthly basis arrangement. An effort to visualize the invisible is to test the limit of documentary photography against the very nature of the medium recording ability that is the indexical." Richard CanonNewsRichard CanonNews Richard has been using Canon cameras since the 1990s, with his first being the now legendary EOS-3. Since then, Richard has continued to use Canon cameras and now focuses mostly on infrared photography. Richard is the founder and editor of CanonNews since 2017, and has worked as a writer on CanonRumors and other websites in the past. Other posts by Richard CanonNews Contact author Facebook page Print Tags: CanonNew Cosmos of Photography 2018 Please login or register to post comments.