The Scotsman

Icy Glencoe wins landscape photograph­er of the year

● Pete Rowbottom from Wigan beat thousands of entries to win the £10,000 top prize in the 12th year of the competitio­n

- By EMILY BEAMENT

A striking shot of shards of ice on a bitterly cold morning in Glencoe has scooped the top prize in this year’s Landscape Photograph­er of the Year Award.

Pete Rowbottom, from Wigan, Lancashire, beat thousands of entries to win the £10,000 top prize in the 12th year of the competitio­n for his “emotionall­y strong” image of icy water in front of the mountain Buachaille Etive Mor.

He took the winning shot in the Highlands on a freezing morning in February.

A blizzard on Derbyshire’s High Peak and a dramatic black and white shot of a fisherman on the rocks at Porth Nanven, Cornwall, were among the category winners in the competitio­n.

An aerial view of terraced houses in Bristol and a delicate close-up of holly leaves in Edinburgh also topped their category.

Awards founder and landscape photograph­er Charlie Waite said: “The numerous strong diagonal lines of the ice fractures in Pete’s image echo the shape of Buachaille Etive Mor in the background and have peaks of their own.

“Youcan’ttakeyoure­yesaway from the relationsh­ip between the mountain and the ice; it is visually very strong and has a mathematic­al precision.

“The cold of the mountain and ice together contrast well with the amber of their surroundin­gs. This is an image where you can hear and feel the landscape, as well as see it, so it is emotionall­y strong and involves the viewer on multiple levels.”

Josef Fitzgerald-patrick, 17, from near Land’s End, Cornwall, won the Young Landscape Photograph­er of the Year title for his picture of a mountain biker in action on the coast.

His shots of the dramatic coast around Land’s End and Porthgwarr­a also helped him to win two of the four categories for young photograph­ers in addition to scooping the main prize.

Special awards were won by shots of a storm wave, atmospheri­cwoodlands­inthemorni­ng, an ethereal image of Daymark beacon in Devon and heather blooming above Buttermere in the Lake District.

And the Network Rail Lines in the Landscape award was won by Alan Courtney from Wimborne, Dorset, for his sunset shot of a train speeding across Holes Bay in the county.

A free exhibition of winning entries will be held on the Balcony at London Waterloo station from Monday 19 November for 12 weeks before going on tour to selected stations nationwide.

Clockwise from main: Ice Spkes; Beauty in Decay by Nicky Goodfellow; Terraced houses, Bristol by Alex Wolfe-warman

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