Portrait, Human Story & Narrative Portraiture
1,082
photographs reviewed
Amara Diallo came to photography criticism through a deep conviction that every portrait is an act of storytelling — a conviction rooted in the oral traditions of West Africa, where the story is the record. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2014. For Amara, the most important question a portrait photographer can answer is: did you listen before you looked?
Before the shutter, there must be a conversation — even if it is silent. The photographer who listens to their subject before looking at them makes a different kind of portrait. You can see it in the eyes. You can feel it in the frame.
Photographic History, Canon & the Long View
637
photographs reviewed
Catherine Byrne brings 180 years of photographic history to every review — the ability to place a contemporary image in the full lineage of the medium, from Talbot's earliest calotypes to today's computational photography. Her scholarly background is in the history of photography and she has contributed to Light & Composition since 2017. She is the panel's most historically demanding voice.
Every photograph exists in conversation with every photograph that came before it. Originality is not the absence of influence — it is what you do with the influences you cannot escape. I ask of every image: where does this sit in the long conversation? What does it say that has not been said before, and what does it say better?
Night Photography, Astrophotography & the Scale of the Cosmos
177
photographs reviewed
Franz Hubner came to photography as a means of documenting what the naked eye can no longer easily see — the night sky as it was before light pollution narrowed our view of it. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2020 and brings a cosmologist's sense of scale — the ability to see a photograph of a star-filled sky as a document of light that has been travelling for millions of years to arrive at a sensor in this particular photographer's hands.
A photograph of the night sky is the longest collaboration in the history of art. The light in the frame left its source before humans existed. The photographer, the camera, the sensor — all are merely the last step in a journey of unimaginable length. That responsibility deserves to be taken seriously.
Emotional Narrative, Viewer Response & Psychological Impact
1,233
photographs reviewed
Sophie Delacroix approaches photography criticism through the lens of perceptual psychology. She has been with Light & Composition since 2013. Her criticism focuses not on what is in the image but on what the image does — the sequence of emotional and cognitive responses it triggers in a viewer who has never seen it before and the one who returns to it a year later.
The photograph is not the thing in the frame. The photograph is what happens in the body of the person looking at it. A great image alters the viewer's physiology — pulse, breath, the specific sadness of a certain blue.
Composition & Visual Structure
1,737
photographs reviewed
Eleanor Voss has contributed to Light & Composition since 2011. A committed formalist, she believes that a photograph's enduring power lies almost entirely in the rigour of its visual architecture — the placement of mass, the tension of negative space, the discipline of the frame. She has little patience for sentiment without structure.
A photograph earns its place through formal rigour alone. Emotion without structure is noise. The frame either holds or it doesn't.
Camera Craft & Technical Execution
1,380
photographs reviewed
James Rokeby brings an engineer's understanding of optics to photography criticism, making him perhaps the most technically demanding reviewer in the field. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2013. For James, creative intent is inseparable from technical decision: if the numbers don't back up the vision, the vision fails.
Every creative decision leaves a trace in the EXIF data. Aperture, shutter, ISO — these are not settings, they are arguments. Bad technical choices cannot be rescued by good subjects.
Intimate Portraiture, Reportage & Lives Told Truthfully
519
photographs reviewed
Kofi Asante brings a working journalist's understanding of what it takes to earn the trust required to make a genuinely intimate portrait — and a corresponding intolerance for portraits that take rather than receive. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2018.
The best portrait is a gift, not a capture. The photographer who earns a subject's trust makes a different image than the photographer who simply presses the shutter while someone is near. You can see the difference. It lives in the eyes. It lives in the hands.
Pattern, Geometry, Abstract Form & Visual Mathematics
651
photographs reviewed
Mei-Ling Chen, whose background spans visual design and applied mathematics, has contributed to Light & Composition since 2015. She is the panel's most analytical voice — the critic who, before considering what a photograph means, maps its geometry, traces its diagonals, and calculates the ratio of dark to light. She believes every great photograph solves a spatial problem.
The frame is a mathematical space. Every element in it has a weight, a vector, a relationship to every other element. Great photography is great geometry — whether the photographer knows it or not.
Award Criteria, Legacy & What Makes an Image Endure
2,341
photographs reviewed
Clara Whitfield has spent many years on photography competition juries and award panels and has contributed to Light & Composition since 2008, making her the longest-serving member. She has seen more award submissions than anyone on the panel — which means she has also seen more of what almost worked. Clara's reviews are the ones photographers read last, because they are the ones that speak plainest truth about why an image deserved the award it received.
Awards are easy to give and hard to justify. The question I ask of every awarded image: will someone be glad this existed in thirty years? Most images fail that test. The ones that pass — I want to know exactly why.
Contrast, Shadow Drama & the Metaphysics of Light
1,935
photographs reviewed
Dmitri Kasakov has contributed to Light & Composition since 2010 and remains its most philosophically demanding voice — the critic most likely to cite Heidegger in a review of a beach photograph. For Dmitri, every photograph is a moral act: the choice of what to light and what to leave in darkness is never merely aesthetic.
Shadow is not the absence of light. Shadow is where the image thinks. The photographer who controls darkness controls meaning. A photograph that is afraid of its own shadows is a photograph that has nothing to say.
Wildlife, Nature & the Ethics of the Unseen Moment
487
photographs reviewed
Victoria Ashby brings a wildlife photographer's ethics and field-earned patience to criticism. She has contributed to Light & Composition since 2017 and is the panel's most demanding voice on the distinction between an image that reveals an animal's true behaviour and one that merely exploits proximity. She has little patience for wildlife photography that puts the image ahead of the animal.
A wildlife photograph is a record of a relationship between the photographer and the natural world. If that relationship involved disturbance, deception, or harm — to the animal or its habitat — the image is compromised before the shutter fires. Patience is not a technique. It is an ethical position.
Shutter Technique, Motion & the Cinematic Single Frame
970
photographs reviewed
Rafael Ortega approaches the single frame with the same rigour he gives to a sequence, and brings a filmmaker's obsession with time, rhythm, and the weight of a single held image to every review. He has been reviewing for Light & Composition since 2014.
A great photograph is a film that refused to move. Everything you need is in that one frame — the before, the after, the cut that never came. The question is whether the photographer understood what they were holding when the shutter closed.
Negative Space, Minimalism & the Japanese Aesthetic
1,352
photographs reviewed
Priya Sharma, whose thinking is grounded in East Asian aesthetics and Japanese visual philosophy, has contributed to Light & Composition since 2012. Her criticism draws on the Japanese concept of Ma — the meaningful pause, the productive emptiness — and she is perhaps the only critic on the panel who considers what a photograph leaves out to be as important as what it includes.
Restraint is the hardest discipline in photography. Anyone can fill a frame. The photographer who can empty one — who can trust the silence — is rare. Ma: the pause that holds more than words.
Macro Photography, Optics & the Science of the Seen
1,395
photographs reviewed
Lena Brandstrom brings deep scientific knowledge of optics to photography criticism — the behaviour of light through glass, the biology of what the human retina can and cannot resolve, the precise moment where a lens's maximum resolution meets the subject's finest detail. She has contributed to Light & Composition since 2012 and is the panel's most forensically precise reviewer.
The photograph reveals what the eye cannot hold. The lens resolves beyond the limits of human vision. This is photography's extraordinary gift — and its most demanding challenge. Most photographers never fully understand what their lens is capable of.
Environmental Portraiture & the Dialogue Between Person and Place
343
photographs reviewed
Valentina Marchetti, whose background bridges art history and documentary photography, has contributed to Light & Composition since 2019. She specialises in environmental portraiture — the photograph that shows a person in their world, where the objects, light, and architecture around them tell as much of the story as the face. She is the panel's most attentive voice on what surrounds the subject and why it matters.
The environment is not the background. The environment is half the portrait. The chair a person sits in, the light that falls through their window, the objects on a shelf — these are not accidents. They are the portrait's second language, and a great photographer reads both.