View from the top: Man on wire wins Clique Sport and Action Challenge
Avid rock climber and high-liner Ryan Sleiman took his winning shot at 6am from a 140 metre high cliff.
Avid rock climber and high-liner Ryan Sleiman took his winning shot at 6am from a 140 metre high cliff.
Each month we ask Clique members to vote for their favourite image from a selection of entries from the Clique Challenge in the Nikon People's Choice Award. Voting for the August Nikon People's Choice Award closes Tuesday, August 30, at 10am AEST. The winner will be announced on the Clique Photos Facebook Page, and will receive a $500 Nikon Store voucher.
Put your photographic skills to the test and whet your appetite for Clique's Shoot the Chef competition. The brief is simple, shoot a chef, and you could win a prize package valued at over $13,000, including Nikon photographic equipment and 2-week artist residency.
"Rejecting my deafness and refusing to wear my hearing aids is not something I am proud of," says photographer Kate Disher-Quill, whose new photography project addresses her acceptance of her disability.
Contemporary Australian photographer explores the transience of youth and beauty in her latest series, Eden.
Hundreds of photographers from across the country have put their creativity in the frame for one of Australia's most prestigious photography competitions.
"This area is so reliant on the river, the communities are there because of the river, and now that it's running dry, the way people relate to the land is changing."
Artist Robyn Stacey uses early camera technology to 'magically' project the city inside a Melbourne hotel room.
The Sydney-based photographer who took what some are hailing as the best ever image of sprinter Usain Bolt says he had three minutes to set up for the photograph.
Waiting for the sky to dance requires patience, luck and dogged determination.
Thinking of taking your photography to the next level and becoming a pro? Here are a few wise words of advice from Australian professionals.
"The works capture that elusive quality that makes up the Territory and celebrate moments peculiar to our region."
A chance to be a street artist without breaking the law.
Dead sparklers, an old picture frame and a pack of cards: Fairfax photographer Steven Siewert made a portraiture prop with found materials.
Summer in Sydney is a scene of high contrasts: searing sunlit spaces and cavernous shadow.
Diane Arbus' work after 1962 is well-documented, but a trove of images donated to the New York Met by the artist's daughters reveal the origins of her style.
The Moran Contemporary Photographic Prize winner for 2015 takes a wry look at the Australian road trip.
The PANPA Newspaper of the Year Awards have recognised 16 of Fairfax's community, regional and metropolitan photographers for their work.
Two of our favourite food photographers share their top five rules.
Commemorating 50 years since the Wave Hill walk off, Brenda L. Croft defiantly confronts continuing Aboriginal cultural dispossession in a series of self-portraits.