Athlone Camera Club photographer wins main ‘How We Age’ competition accolade

An Athlone amateur photographer has won the top prize in a national competition examining how we age.

Helen Maloney, a member of Athlone Camera Club, was rightly rewarded for her lovely image capturing her own mother, Eileen, in her shop with her great granddaughter Ryleigh Maloney Hughes and received a €500 gift voucher for her winning entry.

An intergenerational vignette, a moment of holiday fun, and a poignant Covid-19 snapshot – these are the prize-winning images that captured the judges attention in the Institute of Public Health’s ‘How We Age’ photography competition.

The Institute is delighted to announce the winners in this all-island competition, which was launched in April to reframe how older people are portrayed in Ireland and Northern Ireland.

The competition invited photographers to submit images capturing older people in their everyday lives under the theme of ‘Staying Active, Staying Social, Staying Connected’.

Members of the judging panel were hugely impressed by the range and quality of images submitted in this, the first ever, photography competition hosted by IPH.

The judging panel was made up of Professor Roger O’Sullivan, IPH Director of Ageing Development and Research; Eddie Lynch, Commissioner for Older People in Northern Ireland; Tara Byrne, Arts Programme Manager, Age & Opportunity; Robin Webster, Adjunct Lecturer, Irish Centre for Social Gerontology, NUI Galway and former CEO Age Action Ireland, and Maresa Fagan, IPH Communications Officer.

From the entries received, IPH will create a gallery of stock images for use in its ongoing work to promote healthy ageing and broader public health themes, which may also be made available to partner and allied organisations as a free-to-access image resource.

Commenting on the winning images IPH Director of Ageing Development and Research Roger O’Sullivan said: “We were struck and highly impressed by the creativity of photographers across the island who entered the ‘How We Age’ competition. Many entries featured parents, grandparents, neighbours, friends or community or group activities and the breadth of images really captured the ordinary and extraordinary moments in the everyday lives of older people.”

“This is a first step towards changing how older people are portrayed and we intend to launch a new gallery of images later this year and also to build on this concept of an image bank into the future,” he added.

This ‘How We Age’ gallery of selected images will be launched in October to mark International Day of Older Persons.

 

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