2023 Q4 Singles
Khai Le
Quarter 4 judge, DEAN rUTZ
General News
First: Great picture shot under tough lighting that manages to communicate the urgency and desperation in the subject’s gait, preserve a modicum of anonymity, and still set the scene very well.
First Place: Yannick Peterhans, Freelance
Second Place: Gina Ferazzi, LOS ANGELES Times
Third Place: Paul Rodriguez, Freelance
Honorable Mention:Gina Ferazzi, LOS ANGELES Times
Feature
First: Like all great feature photos, this has a level of immediate gratification for the viewer. Contrast and contradiction, great framing, humor; it works on many levels, and it does so quickly.
First Place: Robert Gauthier, LOS ANGELES Times
Second Place: Sarah Reingewirtz, LOS ANGELES Daily News
Third Place: Sarah Reingewirtz, LOS ANGELES Daily News
Honorable Mention: Sarah Reingewirtz, LOS ANGELES Daily News
Portrait
First: The key to any successful portrait is context, and the photographer went to some length to create that for this movie director going so far as to attempt to replicate the franchise’s first poster. Smart and effective.
First Place: Genaro Molina, Los Angeles Times
Second Place: Genaro Molina, LOS ANGELES Times
Honorable Mention: Gina Ferazzi, LOS ANGELES Times
Third Place: Gina Ferazzi, LOS ANGELES Times
Pictorial
First Place: Genaro Molina, LOS ANGELES Times
Second Place: Patrick Fallon, AFP
Third Place: ringo chiu, freelance
Honorable Mention: Brandon Richardson, LONG BEACH Post
Honorable Mention: AMY GASKIN, FREELANCE
Spot News
First: Chaos reigns supreme in this protest in downtown LA. And the best way to convey that is the use of a long lens that compresses all the activity into a single frame.
First Place: David Swanson, Agence France Presse
Second Place: David Swanson, Agence France Presse
Third Place: David Swanson, Agence France Presse
Entertainment
First: There a lot of things happening here all at the same time, and the photographer did a great job of putting themselves into a position to be able to both line up all the different elements, but also capture the scene at its peak. That requires anticipation that, really, no other photograph in this category holds in quite the same way.
First Place: Robert Gauthier, LOS ANGELES TIMES
Second Place: Sarah Reingewirtz, Los Angleles Daily News
Third Place: Mindy Schauer, ORANGE COUNTY Register
honorable mention: Cristina Klenz, FREELANCE
Sports Features
First: The light and the background work perfectly together to give this image impact and power. Everything lines up just the way you would hope it would.
First Place: Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star
Second Place: Katharine Lotze, Getty
Third Place: Keith Birmingham Pasadena Star
HONORABLE MENTION: Gina Ferazzi, Los Angeles Times
Sports Action
First: A great sports picture speaks for itself. But on those occasions when the eyes of the subject conveys something beyond simple action you have an image that resonates with readers. Caleb Williams eyeing the pylon he won’t reach, in a game the Trojans would lose, is a great image conveying disappointment alongside peak action.
First Place: Keith Birmingham, Pasadena Star
Second Place: Katharine Lotze, Getty
Third Place: Robert Gauthier, LOS ANGELES Times
honorable mention: Katharine Lotze, Getty
FIRE
First: There’s urgency in this frame, and the photographer puts you right in the middle of it with proximity, faces, and animation.
FIRST PLACE: Miles Madison, County News Service
SECOND PLACE: DAVID SWANSON, AFP
THIRD PLACE: DAVID SWANSON, AFP
Meet our judge, DEAN RUTZ
Dean Rutz is a 35-year veteran of The Seattle Times, joining the newspaper in 1988 as Picture Editor. His ability to see the potential of images in print saw his job evolve into page design and headline writing, and during those years The Seattle Times routinely finished among the top three newspapers in NPPA’s Best Use of Pictures contest.
Rutz’s ability to coordinate photographers in the field saw him work increasingly remotely on major sporting events, first building darkrooms, and later organizing on site production in the early days of digital cameras.
From there it was a straight line back into photography with Rutz either editing or shooting nine Olympic Games, and countless sporting championships. Today he is the Times’ lead sports photographer and was recently honored by the Seattle Sports Commission with the Keith Jackson Media Excellence Award, the only photographer to have received that honor.
He lives in Lake Forest Park with his wife, Karen – also a staff photographer at The Seattle Times – and their dogs.
Previously, Rutz was a staff photographer at the Washington (DC) Times, the Palm Beach (FL) Post, and the Cincinnati (OH) Enquirer.