The deadline for Ageing Better and Alamy’s competition, which encourages photographers to capture positive images of people aged 50 and over, is now only one month away. The competition is an opportunity for photographers of all abilities to showcase their style.
Applicants from around the world can submit inclusive photos that avoid the stereotyping of older people and the portrayal of ageing as a wholly negative experience - something commonly seen in stock images and the media.
The entrants will be judged by a panel of experts, including photographer Alex Rotas, alongside representatives of the Centre for Ageing Better and Alamy. There is already a fantastic pool of photos entered for the competition that feature different photographic styles and experiences of later life.
Submissions range from North Sea swimmers to hikers in Texas Hill Country and a mother and daughter in Belgium. Entrants have also submitted photos taken in Bulgaria, the Maldives, Sweden and Canada.
The top three winners and nine runners-up will have their images featured in a blog promoted to Alamy’s customers and social media followers. The three winners will also each have a personal portfolio review by James Allsworth, Head of Content at Alamy, while the nine runners-up will be invited to attend a photography critique group session hosted by the Alamy Content Team. Images can be entered into three categories in the competition: underrepresented older communities, older people doing leisure activities, and multigenerational interactions, and by no later than 30 April 2023.
The competition draws upon the experiences of Alamy, the world’s most diverse stock photography collection with around 150,000 images added every day by thousands of photographers from across the world, and the Centre for Ageing Better, a charitable foundation pioneering ways to make ageing better a reality for everyone including a campaign to challenge ageism. Competitors can take inspiration from Ageing Better’s innovative Age-positive image library, which contains over 3,000 non-stereotypical, inclusive and authentic photos of people aged 50 and aims to improve the representation of older age in stock image collections.
Launched in January 2021, images from the library have been viewed over 10 million times and downloaded more than 100,000 times. Images from the library have been used by a host of organisations including the World Health Organisation, Sport England, the Department of Health and Social care as well as universities and academics, graphic designers and journalists.