Every year, the International Garden Photographer of the Year selects photos from around the world that beautifully showcase gardens, forests, flowers and wildlife. The organization has partnered with the world-renowned Kew Gardens in the U.K., which hosts exhibitions highlighting botanical photography.
These photos are simply stunning, and surprisingly, some of the winning photos were taken by amateur photographers. The annual competition is open to everyone around the world.
This year’s overall winner was Marcio Cabral for his photo entitled “Cerrado Sunrise.” Cerrado is a vast savannah in Brazil that once covered one-fourth of the country. According to the World Wildlife Federation, the cerrado contains 5 percent of the world’s biodiversity, including 11,000 plant species and 800 bird species.
“Marcio has captured a spectacular vision of plant life in the cerrado, displaying the beautiful flowers of Paepalanthus chiquitensis, stretching out on countless filaments towards the first light of the rising sun. It is artistically and technically brilliant, deploying superb use and understanding of equipment, post-capture processes, color and exposure. It has the ability to make us feel novelty and wonder, as if experiencing plant life on this planet for the very first time,” IGPOTY Managing Director Tyrone McGlinchey said on the organization’s website. “As ecosystems such as the Brazilian cerrado are under threat, this image urges us all to document, understand and protect our vulnerable landscapes, with even greater passion.”
The winner of the Abstract Views category, Cathryn Baldock took this photo in Northumberland, U.K. and created this look by layering different images of lily pads to “emphasize their beauty and intricacy.”