1. Perspectives — Sunny Side Up: A Portrait of the Most Average K-Parenting Today, Seungho Kim (South Korea)
    Photo: Seungho Kim / Sony World Photography Awards 2026
  2. Documentary Projects — Under the Shadow of Coca, Santiago Mesa (Colombia)
    Photo: Santiago Mesa / Sony World Photography Awards 2026
  3. Sport — Buzkashi, Todd Antony (New Zealand)
    Photo: Todd Antony / Sony World Photography Awards 2026
  4. Still Life — Talking Without Speaking, Vilma Taubo (Norway)
    Photo: Vilma Taubo / Sony World Photography Awards 2026

Sony World Photography Awards 2026

  • Art, Photography
  • Tokyo Photographic Art Museum, Ebisu
Sébastien Raineri
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Time Out says

From June 20 to July 20, the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum showcases the winning works from one of the world’s most prestigious international photography competitions. Since its launch in 2007, the Sony World Photography Awards has championed photographers at every stage of their careers, providing a global platform for both emerging talent and established practitioners while celebrating the diversity and vitality of contemporary photographic practice.

This Tokyo presentation adopts the thematic concept developed for the exhibition’s debut at Somerset House in London. Visitors are invited to engage with the award-winning photographs through three interconnected narratives: Absence, which reflects on memory, loss and erasure; Humans in the Stories, focusing on the immediacy and complexity of lived experience; and Conflicted Territories, examining borders, divisions and the political and social tensions that shape today’s world. By placing the works in dialogue with one another, the exhibition encourages viewers to consider broader global issues through photography’s uniquely evocative visual language.

A special highlight is a presentation of works by Joel Meyerowitz, recipient of the 2026 Outstanding Contribution to Photography award. Widely regarded as one of the pioneers of colour street photography, Meyerowitz has profoundly influenced the evolution of the medium through his luminous explorations of urban life, light and everyday experience. Displayed alongside this year’s award-winning projects, his photographs create a compelling conversation between the history of modern photography and its most current international expressions. Free to the public, the exhibition offers a timely overview of the diverse perspectives shaping contemporary photography across the world.

Details

Address
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Yebisu Garden Place, 1-13-3 Mita, Meguro
Tokyo
Transport:
Ebisu Station (Yamanote, Saikyo, Shonan-Shinjuku lines), east exit; (Hibiya line), exit 1
Price:
Free
Opening hours:
10am-6pm (Thu, Fri until 8pm) / closed Mon (except Jul 20)

Dates and times

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