Photography

The best of the 2021 Underwater Photographer of the Year Awards

View 35 Images
Underwater Photography Awards. Runner-Up, Behavior. This is a picture of blenny in a fight. It is a species of chaenopsid blenny found around Japan and South Korea. Its most distinctive feature is its hairstyle, which is often referred to as Punk Blenny or Mohican Blenny.
JingGong Zhang/UPY 2021
Winner. Underwater Photographer of the Year 2021. 'Sharks' Skylight'.
Renee Capozzola/UPY 2021
Up & Coming Underwater Photographer of the Year 2021. Most Promising British Underwater Photographer 2021. 'Tying In'.
SJ Alice Bennett/UPY 2021
British Underwater Photographer of the Year 2021. My Backyard Winner. 'While You Sleep'. This final shot is a culmination 25 hours over 4 nights of lying in darkness, covered in mud, waiting on natures unpredictable elements to align.
Mark Kirkland/UPY 2021
Winner, Macro. Pontohi pygmy seahorse (Hippocampus pontohi) is one of the smallest and most recently discovered seahorses. They usually live on reef walls and can be hard to find
Galice Hoarau/UPY 2021
Runner-Up, Macro. 'larval Lionfish'.
Steven Kovacs/UPY 2021
3rd Place, Macro. 'Dream ship'.
chien-ting hou/UPY 2021
Winner, Wrecks. 'BOWLANDER'
Tobias Friedrich/UPY 2021
Runner-Up, Wrecks. 'Reclaimed by the Ocean'.
Grant Thomas/UPY 2021
3rd Place, Wrecks. 'Golden Hour at the Georgios'. The Georgios shipwreck in Neom, Saudi Arabia along the Gulf of Aqaba in the Red Sea. In 1978, this large cargo ship from England became stranded on a reef at night and then suffered a large fire
Renee Capozzola/UPY 2021
Winner, Behavior. Marlin are one of the fastest fish in the sea, a terrifying predator for a small fish in the great blue desert
Karim Iliya/UPY 2021
Underwater Photography Awards. Runner-Up, Behavior. This is a picture of blenny in a fight. It is a species of chaenopsid blenny found around Japan and South Korea. Its most distinctive feature is its hairstyle, which is often referred to as Punk Blenny or Mohican Blenny.
JingGong Zhang/UPY 2021
3rd Place, Behavior. 'Milk feeding'.
Mike Korostelev/UPY 2021
Winner, Portrait. As the Asian sheepshead wrasse grows older, it changes sex from female to male and at the same time it develops a large lump on its head.
Ryohei Ito/UPY 2021
Runner-Up, Portrait. Japanese manefish is not a fish that can be found by looking for it. It can only be encountered by diving when a perfect tide brings them close to shore.
Keigo Kawamura/UPY 2021
3rd Place, Portrait. 'French Angel'.
Michael Gallagher/UPY 2021
Winner, Black & White. This photograph was taken at Leru Cut in the Solomon Islands.
Diana Fernie /UPY 2021
Runner-Up, Black & White. 'Time Travel'.
Martin Broen/UPY 2021
3rd Place, Black & White. 'Double turtle'.
Renata Romeo/UPY 2021
Winner, Compact. 'Doule (Kuhlia Rupestris) near the surface'.
Jack BERTHOMIER/UPY 2021
Runner-Up, Compact. 'Rainbow Goby'.
ManBd/UPY 2021
3rd Place, Compact. 'Pelagic stingray (Pteroplatytrygon violacea)'.
Isaías Cruz/UPY 2021
Runner-Up, Up & Coming. 'Toward Shining Light'.
Ryohei Ito/UPY 2021
3rd Place, Up & Coming. 'Resplendence - Black browed Albatross'.
Danny Lee - Submerged Images Tasmania/UPY 2021
Runner-Up, British Waters Wide-Angle. It’s the microscopic plankton which draws the massive Basking Shark up the west coast of Britain and into the narrow channel between the Isles of Coll and Tire.
Mark Kirkland/UPY 2021
3rd Place, British Waters Wide-Angle. 'Grey seal gully'.
Kirsty Andrews/UPY 2021
Winner, British Waters Macro. The variable blenny (Parablennius pilicornis) is a relatively new arrival to UK coastal waters, with its origins from more southerly waters (it has been recorded throughout the Mediterranean Sea).
Malcolm Nimmo/UPY 2021
Runner-Up, British Waters Macro. 'Stalkie on Bootlace weed'.
Dr Alex Tattersall/UPY 2021
3rd Place, British Waters Macro. 'Nest buddies'.
Dan Bolt/UPY 2021
Winner, British Waters Living Together. 'SS Hispania'.
Kirsty Andrews/UPY 2021
Runner-Up, British Waters Living Together. 'Crab affairs'.
Atanas Petrov/UPY 2021
3rd Place, British Waters Living Together. Anchored in a sheltered inlet on Loch Carron, western Scotland, this floating pontoon is used by local fishermen to stow their gear when not being used.
Dan Bolt/UPY 2021
Winner, British Waters Compact. 'Sunrise Mute Swan Feeding Underwater'.
Ian Wade/UPY 2021
Runner-Up, British Waters Compact. 'Hold Tight'.
Sandra Stalker/UPY 2021
3rd Place, British Waters Compact. 'Pinky'
Sandra Stalker/UPY 2021
Winner, Marine Conservation. A tightly inhabited village off the coast of Panama in Guna Yala region serves as a microcosm reminder of how humans across the planet are consuming land and space at a rapid rate.
Karim Iliya/UPY 2021
View gallery - 35 images

A stunning shot looking up at a pair of reef sharks during sunset has won the prestigious 2021 Underwater Photographer of the Year contest. The spectacular highlighted images this year span everything from surreal undersea wrecks to rare glimpses of little-seen sea creatures.

This year’s contest was the biggest to date, comprising more than twelve categories covering every kind of underwater photography imaginable, including Wide-Angle, Black & White, Wrecks, and Macro. An additional four categories focus especially on British Waters, celebrating the origins of the competition.

Winner. Underwater Photographer of the Year 2021. 'Sharks' Skylight'.
Renee Capozzola/UPY 2021

US photographer Renee Capozzola snagged the overall Photographer of the Year prize with a gorgeous shot taken in French Polynesia. Capozzola, the first woman to ever win the top prize, spent days trying to find a unique angle on these oft-photographed sharks.

“Instead of focusing on split-level images as I often like to do, I decided to try something different,” Capozzola says. “I envisioned and aimed to capture the sharks underwater with the sunset seen through Snell's window. It took many attempts, but on this one particular evening, the water was calm, the sunset was vibrant, and I got extremely lucky with the composition as well.”

Winner, Black & White. This photograph was taken at Leru Cut in the Solomon Islands.
Diana Fernie /UPY 2021

Martin Edge, one of the judges this year, says he was mesmerized when he first saw Capozzola’s photograph.

“The stark bellies of the sharks create a kind of union with each other just above there reflections,” says Edge. “The birds above are particular dominant in the sunset night sky and it looks like they are queuing to take their turn to feast. Mind-blowing underwater imagery at it’s very best.”

British Underwater Photographer of the Year 2021. My Backyard Winner. 'While You Sleep'. This final shot is a culmination 25 hours over 4 nights of lying in darkness, covered in mud, waiting on natures unpredictable elements to align.
Mark Kirkland/UPY 2021

Mark Kirkland won the British Underwater Photographer of the Year prize for an image the judges deemed nothing short of a masterpiece. Kirkland took more than two years to capture the shot he wanted after first conceiving the image when he came across a small muddy pond that is alive with frogs for only a few nights every year.

“Technically assured, artistically innovative and revealing an original and valuable view of the life of frogs,” says Alex Mustard, one of this year’s judges. “Every aspect contributes to the story, spawn shouts what’s happening, bare trees show season, the sky demonstrates time of day, tower blocks reveal location, even the droplets on the dome look like stars!”

Runner-Up, Wrecks. 'Reclaimed by the Ocean'.
Grant Thomas/UPY 2021

Take a look through our gallery at all the top shots from this year’s Underwater Photographer of the Year contest.

Source: UPY

View gallery - 35 images
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • LinkedIn
1 comment
Nelson Hyde Chick
The way we are going, there will be little to no life in our oceans in the upcoming decades, so capture this while you can!