“Everyday Family Life”: Singles Winners
Winner – Ralph Milewski / Second Place - Anne Launcelott / Third Place - Ubo Pakes /Fourth Place -Tariqamin Mansuri / Fifth Place -Never Edit / Sixth Equal: Never Edit, Ralph Milewski, Anne Launcelott
“Everyday Family Life”: Series Winners
Winner – B.D. Colen / Second Place - Sultan Koç / Third Place - Marina Dego / Tied for Fourth - Catia Montgna & Myriam Aadli / Special Prize - Jonathan Faus
“Everyday Family Life” Singles Finalists: Dan Fenstermacher, David Williams, Donna Kross, Dov Oron, Haim Berman, Limor Zadok, Luca Regoli, Marci Lindsay, Niklas Lindskog, Patricia Kerkhofs, Paul Kessel, Tanmoy Chatterjee, Yash Mishra
“Everyday Family Life” Projects Finalists: Adriana Keren, Ana Cichowicz, Eléonore Botton, Saikat Chanda, Ugo Milano, Chris Yan
“Visions” (street and non-street) Singles Winners
Winner – Eléonore Botton / Second Place - Luca Regoli / Third Place - Chris Yan / Fourth Place -Joy Saha / Fifth Place - Ludovic Viévard
Vision Series Winners
Street Conceptual - Joint winners: Nadia Eeckhout & Chris Yan / Second Place - Vikas Nama / Third Place - Pepe Alvarez /
Not Street - Winner - Jonathan Faus / Second Place- Stuart Hyde / Third Place – Sourav Das
Street - Joint winners: Marika Poquet - Sultan Koḉ - Rajesh Dhar /Second Place - Pascal Flores / Joint Thirds - Andrew Glickman & Rajib Singha / Special Prize – Lola Minister
“Visions” Singles Finalists Anson Chan, Athanasios Kokkinis, B. D. Colen, Bernhard Wasem, Bruce Saille, Charlie Hickling, David Williams, Debora Sanso, Éléonore Botton, Erik Corduwener, Florian Asche, Jay Nabbe, Joshgun Suleymanov, Joy Saha, Laura Iordache, Lola Minister, Luca Regoli, Ludovic Vievard, Marc Dessi, Marika Poquet, Marilyn Strauss, Michael Eugste, Mikael Carlsson, Mukul Ranjan, Nadia Eeckhout, Olga Volodina, Pascal Flores, Paul Kessel, Pepe Álvarez-Rogel, Pia Parolin, Ploutarcos Haloftis, Saikat Chanda, Sandra Fine, Smita Shukla, Sultan Koç, Ugo Milano, نسخة من
“Visions” Projects FinalistsVision Series Street Conceptual Juan Miguel Estocio, Jürgen Warschun, Marilyn Strauss,Visions Series Not Street Debora Magliaro Sanso, Marina Dego, The Monochromatic Society,Visions Series Street Dan Fenstermacher, Gwen Julia, Olga Volodina,
“The Visual Memory of Protest” Singles Winners
Winner – Adar Eyal / Second Place - Patty DeJuneas / Third Place – B.D.Colen / Fourth Place - Gerd Bonse / Tied for Fifth Jay Nabbe & Never Edit
“The Visual Memory of Protest” Projects Winners
Winner - Jeff Tidwell / Second Place -Ludovic Viévard / Third Place - Robert Willis / Fourth Place - Martin Ingber / Fifth Place - Richard Keshen
“The Visual Memory of Protest” Singles Finalists Adar Eyal, Alain Van Hille, BD Colen, Bjoern Maletz, Daniel Kashi, Gerd Bonse, Gianni Olivetti, Haim Berman, Jacques Pharand, Jay Nabbe, Jiby Charles, Evangelia Mageira, Never Edit, Oliver Kuehnel, Patty DeJuneas, Paul Kessel , Pedro Nieblas, Per-Olof Stoltz, Rajib Singha, Sandra Fine, Srijoyee Datta, Stevi Jackson, Sultan Koç, Thomas Hackenberg, Victor Mora, Vlad Iordache, Xianzhuyue Li, Yash Mishra
“The Visual Memory of Protest” Series Finalists Abhiskek Maitra, Alain van Hille, Athanasios Kokkinis, Avi Itzhaki, Bruce Saille, Catia Montagna, Dan Fenstermacher, Edwin Carungay, Estocio Juan Miguel, Evangelia Mageira, Gianni Olivetti, Giovanni Gianfranco Candida, Grizel Ubarry, Haim Berman, Jay Nabbe, Jacques Pharand, Jeff Tidwell, Lorenzo Ferretti, Ludovic Vievard, Manas Das, Marc Dessi, Martin Ingber, Orna Noar, Patty DeJuneas, Pedro Nieblas, Richard Keshen, Robert Willis, Rudy Ortega, Sultan Koḉ
Fifth ProgresFestival
An international event celebrating
street photography and art
WINNERS
The jury
Margarita Mavromichalis, Gabi Ben Avraham, Siegfried Hansen – Vision Single
Margarita Mavromichalis, Michael Dressel, Keef Charles – Vision Series
Aña Abrao, John Gill, Batsceba Hardy – The Visual Memory of Protest (singles and Projects)
Ornella Mazzola, Batsceba Hardy, Sabyasachi Nath – Everyday Family Life (singles and Projects)
Festival editorial team
Cameron Scott, Manager
Delfim Correlo and Alberto M. Melis, Vision Section – Martin Agius, Cameron Scott, Protest Section – Cassian Edwards, Family Life Section, website proofreader – Promoters: Shubhodeep Roy, Federico Borobio, Martin Agius
The winning photographs will be published on our official website, featured in our magazine, and compiled into a dedicated festival book.
Final exhibition: Likely in Autumn 2026, in Genova, Italy.
Progressive Street expresses its deep gratitude, sincere honour, and appreciation to PCI for the opportunity to form a partnership
What truly unites Progressive Street and PCI is our shared dedication to safeguarding photography from the dominance of consumerism that characterises modern society. We are committed to promoting not only artistic expression but also the cultural, social, and documentary dimensions of photography. Through our efforts, we seek to highlight different aspects of reality—celebrating beauty while also recognising tragedy and hardship. Both organisations aim to transition from the digital, virtual space into tangible, real-world experiences.
IKSHANA International Photo Festival 2026
Our festival is a non-profit event dedicated to showcasing authentic, stereotype-free images that capture meaningful moments in life. We aim to foster connections, inspire insights, and promote reflection and a positive outlook. However, during these challenging times for our world, we at Progressive are finding it difficult to continue with our everyday activities. That is why we have chosen themes that help us stay connected to our humanity. We invite all photographers with a passion for their craft, as this quality drives significant artistic, political, and social expression. Committed photographers embody this trio in their work. Our platform welcomes photographers of all skill levels in the fields of street photography, documentary, and photojournalism. We support artistic goals across various genres and strive to foster an inclusive environment for everyone.
The themes for the ProgresFestival 2026 photo challenge are "Visions" – “The Visual Memory of Protest” – “Everyday Family Life”
Visions – (street and non-street) Participants are encouraged to explore creative and abstract photography.
Visual Memory of Protest (street) This theme inspires participants to document the stories, feelings, and experiences of protesters, highlighting both the collective efforts and the personal effects of social change. We invite photographers to capture emotions such as hope, anger, fear, determination, and solidarity during protests. The theme supports various photographic styles, from close-up portraits to documentary shots that convey the energy and atmosphere of demonstrations. Photographers could highlight protesters' resilience and unity, showing how issues of protest affect daily life and how simple acts can serve as forms of protest. They could also examine protest symbols and acts of resistance outside of large demonstrations. Photographers are required to include a short statement explaining the idea or concept behind their submissions.
Everyday Family Life Capture daily family moments, without staged shots. Focus on the small details that reveal a life story. It is essential to demonstrate the capacity to capture moments that narrate a story within an artistic context. This encompasses not merely casual snapshots but also images that explore family dialectics in depth. For those interested, submitting a project is possible, and in this case, staged images are allowed. The most notable submissions will be considered for publication on our website or in a magazine. The project must have a title and a brief statement explaining the idea or concept behind the submission.
The organising team will evaluate the qualifying images to determine which will advance to the final round for judging. Winners and nominated will be exhibited at the ProgresFestival 2026, featured on our official website and in our magazine, and promoted across the competition's social media platforms. The organisers have the discretion to recommend certain images that have not received votes from the jury. In addition to the three winners in each category, the jury may award other distinctions, such as Best Street Photograph, Best Artistic Photograph, Best Portrait, and so on.
*The organiser will contact finalists to request a high-resolution JPEG of their selected photograph(s), which must be submitted quickly to avoid disqualification. Finalists should also include the year and location where the photos were taken. We may request the raw file in certain situations, even though we acknowledge that some photographers may not have access to it. The organiser reserves the right to refuse or exclude any entry at its sole discretion. The organiser will not provide feedback to those whose submissions were not selected. The Jury's decision is final. Neither appeals nor objections will be accepted. The images will be judged blind. This means the judges view the photos without the photographer's name or details. The organisation is not responsible for changes to contests or festivals resulting from major external forces. The organiser may cancel or modify competitions and conditions without notice, but will promptly inform participants of any changes. The organiser disclaims responsibility for potential copyright infringements by third parties and cannot be liable for claims from individuals in photos; such responsibility rests with the participant.
By entering the photo contest, photographers grant the organiser five years of unconditional permission to use their images for ProgresFestival, including exhibitions, in all media, such as social media, online, and print. This covers contests, festivals, exhibitions, and promotional activities overseen by ProgresFestival. Participants cannot claim copyright compensation, but proper credit will be given. Photos will not be sold or used commercially.