We’re thrilled to spotlight 10 emerging photographers who are making a significant impact in the photography world this March 2025. This carefully curated selection showcases rising talent from around the globe, with images that highlight creativity, innovation, and fresh perspectives in the art of visual storytelling. From dynamic street photography and captivating travel shots to thought-provoking fine art photography, these photographers are reshaping contemporary photography.
Each month, we discover exceptional work through our photography competitions and spontaneous portfolio submissions. This collection represents the new wave of creative talent shaping the future of photography.
Dive into these inspiring images from talented photographers who are pushing the boundaries of the medium. Let their unique vision ignite your own passion for photography and spark new creative ideas!
Marvin Anani
United States
Marvin Anani is a photographer from Denver, CO. His work straddles architecture, landscape photography, urban exploration and american road travel culture. After working as a freelance photojournalist for many Colorado news outlets, he has turned his cameras away from the people and towards their environment and the places and spaces that we all inhabit, sharing unassuming minimalism and everyday modernism as his primary visual instrument.
Steve Dinberg
United States
The sense of adventure that comes with exploring new places and meeting new people is what keeps me interested in street photography. A fellow photographer once told me, “There are two reasons people travel: the first is to see something new, the other is to experience something old.”
I have always been a passionate photographer. I look for that decisive moment, and I am constantly in search of that special magical light, interesting faces that reveal personal history, hands that tell a story, and amazing eyes that convey emotion, but most of all, I try to capture that moment of interaction. I instinctively look for the colors, shapes, and textures in a defined area. As a lifelong traveler, I look for a street, alleyway, or even the face of a person that conveys meaning to their surroundings.
Debbie McCulliss
United States
Through her lens, Debbie McCulliss captures the pulse of the wild - its strength, vulnerability, and untamed beauty. Based in Colorado, this winter wildlife and nature photographer transforms her global expeditions into visual stories. Each journey deepens her understanding of local histories, environmental challenges, and preservation efforts. Her work serves as both art and advocacy, championing respect for nature, protection of wildlife habitats, and survival of endangered species.
McCulliss continues to evolve as an artist while forging deeper connections with nature, especially in polar regions across the globe. While she takes pride in creating educational narratives and striking imagery, she aims to create art that not only captivates but catalyzes - sparking dialogue, inspiring action, and leaving an indelible mark on viewers' consciousness.
Chris Ha
Canada
Chris Ha is a travel and portrait photographer from Canada, now based in Miami, Florida. His work captures the beauty of diverse landscapes and human connection, blending technical skill with a passion for storytelling. From sweeping natural vistas to vibrant cityscapes, his photography evokes emotion and a deep sense of place. His work has gone viral on social media, where audiences are drawn to his stunning visuals and the stories they tell. His portfolio spans breathtaking travel scenes, intimate portraits, and aerial perspectives, blending artistry with a deep appreciation for the world around him. Through his photography, Chris aims to transport viewers into the heart of the stories he tells, inspiring them to see the beauty in both the extraordinary and the everyday. You can see more of his work on Instagram.
Colin Page
United Kingdom
I begun my journey into photography thanks partly to the Duke of Edinburgh Awards project and the help of my Dad who set up a make shift darkroom in the cramped spare bedroom.
I worked in a professional darkroom and then art studio for nearly 20 years.
Using many different film cameras, usually borrowed or second hand, I always developed and printed my own pictures.
The new technologies replaced the darkroom and I was made redundant. I tried many different things including an HND in photography as a mature student.
BUT……
After a long near death illness, and with the help of my family, I took up photography again.
Mostly ‘street photography’ and with new digital cameras. Using a computer instead of a darkroom but only doing that could be done in a darkroom.
Miguel Blázquez
Spain
Miguel Bláquez was born in 2001 in Ávila, Spain. He is a prominent video artist with a strong academic background in the visual arts. He earned a Bachelor of Arts from the Escuela de Arte y Superior de Conservación y Restauración de Bienes Culturales de Ávila. Later, he pursued a Degree in Fine Arts at the Faculty of Fine Arts of the University of Salamanca.
During his time at university, Blázquez actively participated in projects such as the Audiovisual Art Exhibition by the 4th Year Fine Arts students at the Juan del Enzina Theater in Salamanca. His talent was recognized when he won the XXVII edition of the San Marcos Awards in the “Audiovisual” category, with his work exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art of Salamanca (DA2) in 2024. Additionally, his piece “El vídeo más grande del mundo” was showcased at the (S8) XV Mostra Internacional de Cinema Periférico in A Coruña. Another of his works, “Vídeo ensayo”, was exhibited at the Condeduque Contemporary Culture Center in Madrid in 2023.
Blázquez continues to establish himself as a talented video artist, constantly exploring and contributing to the world of art.
Syed Mahabubul Kader
Bangladesh
Syed Mahabubul Kader, born and brought up in Dhaka, Bangladesh. I am an independent photojournalist with a 14-year career documenting political issues, social issues and cultural events. As a contributing photographer at Zuma Press, my work has been featured in major publications worldwide, including National Geographic, The Mail, The Times, The Courier, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, La Vie Magazine and many others. My award-winning images have been exhibited globally, showcasing my dedication to capturing the essence of human experience.
Anastasia Egonyan
Ukraine/Armenia
Anastasia Egonyan (b.1987, Kharkiv, Ukraine) is an international artist of Armenian descent based in Berlin. Her practice is driven by emotional fluctuations and psychological experiences that are deeply rooted in her introspective life experiences. She continues to balance a longstanding practice in photography with evolving focus on painting and textile. Frequent engagement with family narratives, Armenian ancestry, and the exploration of female fragility are closely integrated into the evolving sense of self, as she continues to expand her approach across diverse mediums.
Anastasia integrates textiles and predominantly natural materials into her artistic practice, delving into the tactile and symbolic dimensions of her heritage. Her work includes manual photo transfer techniques, traditional Armenian sheep wool, and the delicate use of pearls. By incorporating Armenian words and common phrases into her creations, she preserves and celebrates her cultural identity. Anastasia finds profound symbolism in the simplicity of everyday life while honouring the strength and resilience of women through historical and cultural lenses.
Egonyan’s artistic practice is grounded in psychological self-reflection, where themes of ancestral heritage and identity gradually unfold. Her use of oil paint, textile, photography collages, and mixed media often employs layering techniques to shield the vulnerable aspects of emotional and personal experience. These layers, whether of paint or fabric, serve to shield the intimacy of these personal explorations, preserving a sense of privacy while concealing the raw intensity of the truth. The act of layering thus becomes an allegory, creating a barrier between the deeply personal and the viewer, who may not yet be prepared for such exposure.
Buck Holzemer
United States
Buck Holzemer's photography career began at the young age of eight when he climbed onto a garage roof to capture images of his friends playing basketball below. This experience sparked a lifelong fascination with the magic little window of the camera. After an multi-year detour to study the unseen world through physics and mathematics, he returned to the “magic little window” in his late twenties and began a career in photography and soon expanded into filmmaking.
Throughout his career, Buck has received numerous accolades, including the prestigious Clio award for television commercials, recognition in the Communication Arts Photography Annual, awards from Print magazine, and the Grand Prize for fine art work from PDN magazine. In 2013, he won a Best of Show award from the International Photography Awards, and in 2019, he received the People's Choice Award from National Geographic.
Buck's versatility as an image maker is evident in his work across various photographic genres and his filmmaking projects in Minneapolis, Los Angeles, New York, Milan, and Guatemala. For the past decade, he has collaborated with producer Patti Petrich to create media for Common Hope, a St. Paul based non-profit organization that supports education for children in Guatemala. Through this partnership, he has produced numerous videos and portraits of over 800 Guatemalan children.
In recent years, Buck has dedicated his time primarily to personal photographic projects.
Rempo Gaola
Uruguay
The photographer: a tireless seeker of moments, a pursuer of light and shadow. Is he a witness or a creator? Capture what is or invent what could have been?
His search never stops, because there is always another story to discover, another image to unearth. Perhaps, deep down, what he is after is not only a perfect image, but the trace of himself in each photograph. The blurry, sepia and b/w images have an almost ghostly quality, as if they caught the eco of a time that no longer belongs to as. They suggest more than they show, leaving room for imagination and nostalgia. The warmth of another era hides in the faded tones of sepia; in the contrast of b/w, light and shadow tell stories of absences and presences that never completely stop. The superimposed images add another layer of mystery. Figures that blend, faces that duplicate, landscapes that merge in a single impossible instant. They are fragments of memories that intersect, as if memory itself played with its own limits.
In these images, the past and the present merge, creating a reality that never completely existed, but that, in some way, we feel like ours.