Point, Shoot, Submit
Our new and improved photo contest swings into gear
- By Carey Winfrey
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2004, Subscribe
Last year's photo contest, our first ever, was so successful—more than 12,000 entries yielding 50 finalists and 6 winners—that we've decided to do it again. And this year we will accept electronic entries as well as prints submitted by mail. We've also increased the value of the prizes. The rules, some of which have changed, are published below. Thanks to our attorneys, the rules are impressively elaborate. Please read them carefully. A submission form for mailed entries appears on page 119.
Prizes: Five winners will be selected, one for each category. In addition, we will select one grand-prize winner. Winners of each category will receive $1,000. The grand-prize winner, chosen from 50 finalists, will receive an eight-day Smithsonian Journeys cruise for two to Alaska in late July 2005—including lodging, meals and round-trip airfare from New York or Los Angeles—or the cash equivalent. Additional, noncash prizes will be provided by HP. Winners must sign an affidavit and license and will be responsible for paying any taxes they may owe on a prize.
Who May Enter: The contest is open to amateur photographers ages 18 and over. Smithsonian Institution employees, their immediate families (children, siblings and spouses) and others living in their households are not eligible. Nor are professional photographers who earn more than half of their income taking pictures. Smithsonian editors will determine winners' eligibility.
What to Enter: The five contest categories are drawn from those subjects of special interest to the magazine:
Americana—Events, objects or activities connecting the American people to their history or their cultural heritage.
The Natural World—Animals, plants and landscapes; geological or climatological features; and scientific processes and endeavors.
People—Individuals from all walks of life.
Culture and the Arts—Paintings, sculpture, crafts or other instances of creativity, including people in performance.
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