Service above selfies
90 years of The Rotarian’s photo contest
Like the technology we use to take photographs, The Rotarian magazine’s photo contest has evolved over the past 90 years. Our first contest, in 1928, asked readers for their vacation photos. In 1941, a new category was added for color photography. Some years our contest had a single theme, such as “Rotary in Action” (1974) and “Service Above Self” (2006); other years, it featured categories, such as “This Is Rotary” and “This Is My Country” (1961). Photographers no longer send us their submissions through the mail as prints or slides; instead they upload their digital images – often, photos they’ve taken using cellphone cameras and selfie sticks.
Like the technology we use to take photographs, The Rotarian magazine’s photo contest has evolved over the past 90 years. Our first contest, in 1928, asked readers for their vacation photos. In 1941, a new category was added for color photography. Some years our contest had a single theme, such as “Rotary in Action” (1974) and “Service Above Self” (2006); other years, it featured categories, such as “This Is Rotary” and “This Is My Country” (1961). Photographers no longer send us their submissions through the mail as prints or slides; instead they upload their digital images – often, photos they’ve taken using cellphone cameras and selfie sticks.
Through it all, Rotarians have turned their cameras on the world to tell Rotary’s many stories. We’ve seen breathtaking landscapes, expressive images of people, and inspiring shots of Rotary projects. As Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist and 2014 contest judge David Hume Kennerly put it, “There’s no more potent weapon on earth than a concerned eye behind a camera.”
The deadline is approaching for this year’s photo contest. Find some inspiration in these shots from years past and send us your entry by 15 February. Your photo could be the one that inspires Rotarians in years to come.