List of women photographers

Women have made significant contributions to photography since its inception. Notable participants include:

Afghanistan

  • Farzana Wahidy (born 1984), documentary photographer concentrating on women's issues in Afghanistan

Algeria

Argentina

  • Sara Facio (born 1932), celebrity portraitist and cofounder of La Azotea, South America's first photo publishing house
  • Annemarie Heinrich (1912–2005), originally German, portrait photographer
  • Adriana Lestido (born 1955), her black-and-white photographs document the often difficult place of women in society
  • Grete Stern (1904–1999), originally German, a notable Modernist

Australia

  • Narelle Autio (born 1969), photojournalist working first in Europe and the USA before returning to Australia in 1998 as staff photographer for the Sydney Morning Herald
  • Polly Borland (born 1959), now living in England, known both for her portraits of famous Australians and for several series of stylized portraits
  • June Browne (born 1923), photographs under the pseudonym Alice Springs
  • Alex Cearns, animal photography
  • Suzanna Clarke (born 1961), see New Zealand
  • Olive Cotton (1911–2003), modernist photographer working in the 1930s and 1940s in Sydney, receiving commissions from the publisher Sidney Ure Smith
  • Maggie Diaz (1925–2016), American-born photographer, noted for her 1950s Chicago Collection
  • Joyce Evans (born 1929), opened the first commercial photo gallery in Melbourne, later working herself in portraiture and landscapes, taught history of photography
  • Anne Geddes (born 1956), stylized photographs of babies published in book-form or calendars
  • Kate Geraghty (born 1973), photojournalist for the Sydney Morning Herald, covered the 2002 Bali bombings and 2003 invasion of Iraq
  • Carol Jerrems (1949–1980), explored issues of sexuality, youth, identity and mortality
  • Margaret Michaelis-Sachs (1902–1985), see Poland
  • Tracey Moffatt (born 1960), explores issues of sexuality, history, representation and race
  • Polixeni Papapetrou (1960–2018), noted for her themed photo series about people's identities
  • Alexia Sinclair (born 1976), fine-art photographer
  • Ruby Spowart (born 1928), photographs of the Australian outback in the 1980s and 1990s

Austria

  • Claire Beck (1904–1942), Jewish photographer in Vienna, died in the Riga concentration camp
  • Gerti Deutsch (1908–1979), photojournalist for Picture Post and other publications, particularly keen on photographing music
  • Trude Fleischmann (1895–1990), society photographer in Vienna, re-established her business in New York in 1940
  • Dora Kallmus (1881–1963), fashion and portrait photographer
  • Lotte Meitner-Graf (1899–1973), portrait photographer in Vienna until 1937 when she came to London, Great Britain
  • Margaret Michaelis-Sachs (1902–1985), see Poland
  • Lisette Model (1906–1983), see United States
  • Inge Morath (1923–2002), Magnum photographer in London, then covered Europe, the Middle East and South America for Holiday, Paris Match and Vogue
  • Margherita Spiluttini (born 1947), specializes in architecture
  • Edith Tudor-Hart (1908–1973), social documentary in her adopted home in Great Britain

Azerbaijan

  • Rena Effendi (born 1977), interested in the environment, post-conflict society, the effects of oil industry on people and social disparity

Belarus

Belgium

Brazil

  • Ingeborg de Beausacq (1910–2003), see Germany

Cameroon

Canada

Photobooks by Carol Beckwith, Nina Berman, Marrie Bot, KayLynn Deveney, Rena Effendi, Aya Fujioka (藤岡亜弥), Cristina García Rodero, Fay Godwin, Lourdes Grobet, Mikiko Hara, Reiko Imoto (井本礼子), Kyōko Ioka (井岡今日子), Olya Ivanova (Ольга Иванова), Betsy Karel, Rinko Kawauchi, Vaida Keleras, Yōko Kishikawa (岸川洋子), Fusako Kodama, Eriko Koga (古賀絵里子), Ljalja Kuznetsova (Ляля Кузнецова), Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen, Helen Levitt, Markéta Luskačová, Bertien van Manen, Mary Ellen Mark, Miyuki Matsuda, Susan Meiselas, Inge Morath, Yurie Nagashima, Mika Ninagawa, Kei Orihara, Chizuru Ōta (太田ちづる), Megumi Ōtsuka (大塚めぐみ), Doris Quarella, Emmanuelle Riva, Inta Ruka, Toshie Saitō (齋藤利江), Rosalind Solomon, Toyoko Tokiwa

China (People's Republic)

  • Chen Man (born 1980), fashion photographer using digital techniques to produce covers for Chinese and international magazines
  • Hou Bo (1924–2017), portraits (and less formal photographs) of leading officials including Mao Zedong and the founding of the People's Republic in 1949
  • Yijun Liao (born 1979), known as Pixy Liao, self-portraits with her younger male partner
  • Shao Hua (1938–2008), daughter-in-law of Mao Zedong, photographed party celebrities, factories and army units in the 1950s, head of the China Photographers Association
  • Zhang Jingna (born 1988), now in Singapore, professional photographer for companies including Mercedes Benz and Canon, has also contributed to Harper's Bazaar, Elle and Flare
  • O Zhang (born 1976), photographs of Chinese youth including Chinese girls adopted by Americans and Chinese art students in London

Croatia

Cuba

Czechoslovakia, Czech Republic

Denmark

Egypt

Estonia

  • Ann Tenno (born 1952), landscape photographer and photo artist, noted for her photographs of Tallinn and the churches and manor houses of Estonia

Finland

France

  • Martine Barrat (date of birth unknown), based in New York, has photographed the black inhabitants of Harlem since the early 1980s
  • Claude Batho (1935–1981), remembered for the detailed images of her home and for her series on Claude Monet's garden at Giverny
  • Valérie Belin (born 1964), whose photographs have played with the distinction between illusion and reality
  • Alexandra Boulat (1962–2007), photojournalist and co-founder of the VII Photo Agency
  • Adeline Boutain (1862–1946), French photographer and publisher of postcards
  • Claude Cahun (1894–1954), photographer and artist, remembered for her self-portraits (1927–47)
  • Sophie Calle (born 1953), writer, photographer and installation artist, also photography professor
  • Dominique Darbois (1925–2014), photojournalist who has concentrated on the victims of European colonialism
  • Françoise Demulder (1947–2008), war photographer
  • Geneviève Élisabeth Disdéri (c. 1817 – 1878), early photographer, wife of André-Adolphe-Eugène Disdéri
  • Claudine Doury (born 1959), photojournalist
  • Gisèle Freund (1908–2000), German-born, known for her documentary photography and portraits of writers and artists
  • Laure Albin Guillot (1879–1962), portraits of Paris celebrities, wide variety of other genres, several high-ranking administrative positions
  • Florence Henri (1893–1982), surrealist
  • Irina Ionesco (born 1935), erotic images of lavishly dressed women posing provocatively
  • Germaine Krull (1897–1985), photographically-illustrated books, photojournalism
  • Brigitte Lacombe (born 1950), photographer of film sets
  • Ergy Landau (1896–1967), see Hungary
  • Catherine Leroy (1945–2006), photojournalist, particularly known for her photography of the Vietnam war
  • Benedicte Van der Maar (born 1968), art photography, human photography
  • Dora Maar (1907–1997), both a commercial and a street photographer in the 1920s and 30s
  • Sarah Moon (born 1941), fashion photographer, now concentrating on gallery work
  • Janine Niépce (1921–2007), prolific photojournalist
  • Bettina Rheims (born 1952), strip-tease artists and acrobats, stuffed animals, also advertising, and photography of nude women making her a best-seller
  • Sophie Ristelhueber (born 1949), who has photographed the effects of war on landscape
  • Emmanuelle Riva (born 1927), primarily an actor but also a noted and published photographer
  • Lise Sarfati (born 1958), images of listless young people in Russia and the United States
  • Christine Spengler (born 1945), photojournalist who has concentrated on the victims of war
  • Agnès Varda (born 1928), film director and photographer, documentary realism, feminist issues
  • Véronique de Viguerie (born 1978), photojournalist, particularly known for her photography of the most recent Afghan war
  • Ylla (born Camilla Koffler) (1911–1955), see Hungary

Gambia

Germany

Greece

  • Ianna Andreadis (born 1960), combines photography with her interest in archaeology, also landscapes from southern Africa
  • Nelly's (1899–1998), noted for her Greek temples, Berlin Olympics, later advertising, photo-reportages in the United States
  • Mary Paraskeva (1882–1951), possibly the first Greek woman to have left a large photographic legacy from the beginning of the 20th century
  • Athena Tacha (born 1936), conceptual photographer

Guatemala

  • María Cristina Orive (1931–2017), photographer, reporter and photojournalist, co-founder of the La Azotea publishing the work of Latin American photographers

Hong Kong

  • Wong Wo Bik (graduated 1977), architectural photographer

Hungary

  • Vivienne Balla (born 1986), fashion and fine art
  • Eva Besnyö (1910–2002), see Netherlands
  • Ata Kandó (born 1913), see Netherlands
  • Judith Karasz (1912–1977), Bauhaus graduate
  • Ergy Landau (1896–1967), Hungarian-born photographer, worked in Vienna, Berlin and latterly in Paris
  • Sylvia Plachy (born 1943), see United States
  • Ylla (born Camilla Koffler) (1911–1955), first to specialize in animal portraiture

Iceland

India

Iran

  • Parisa Damandan (born 1967), has collected portrait photographs illustrating the history of Isfahan, continuing her work after the 2003 Bam earthquake
  • Shadi Ghadirian (born 1974), portraits of women dressed in traditional style, often juxtaposed with modern anomalies such as a mountain bike or cola can, now increasingly exhibited in the west
  • Zahra Kazemi (1948–2003), Iranian-Canadian freeland photojournalist who died following arrest in Iran after covering poverty, destitutions and oppression in the Middle East
  • Sanaz Mazinani (born 1978), Iranian-Canadian photographer and curator, installation based photography
  • Shirin Neshat (born 1957), photos of women confronted by Islamic fundamentalism, later working with multimedia and film
  • Shirana Shahbazi (born 1974), conceptual photography, installations
  • Mitra Tabrizian (born 1959), British-Iranian, professor of photography at the University of Westminster, photobook Correct Distance, a critique of corporate culture
  • Newsha Tavakolian (born 1981), Iranian documentary photographer
  • Maryam Zandi (born 1947), founding board member of Iran's National Society of Photographers, has published many calendars of Iranian portraits

Iraq

Ireland

  • Helen Sloan (active since 1994), still and film photographer, known for photographing the TV series Game of Thrones

Israel

Italy

Jamaica

Japan

  • Mikiko Hara (born 1967), colour snapshots of people or things in everyday life, often causing feelings of levity or foreboding
  • Hiromix (born 1976), life from a teenager's perspective and photo books on identity, community, gender and the everyday
  • Hisae Imai (1931–2009), specialized in the photography of horses
  • Miyako Ishiuchi (born 1947), contrasty prints including close-ups of the very old
  • Rinko Kawauchi (born 1972), serene, poetic photography
  • Fusako Kodama (born 1945), depicted Japan as a nation of high technology, and life in Tokyo
  • Michiko Kon (born 1955), new approach to mainly black-and-white still lifes with images of everything from toothbrushes to timepieces and fish parts[1]
  • Miyuki Matsuda (born 1961), an actor who has published photography of nudes
  • Michiko Matsumoto (born 1950), portraits of artists and dancers living in various countries
  • Tomoko Miyamoto (born 1960)
  • Yurie Nagashima (born 1973), portraits, including portraits of herself and her family in the nude, street photography, still lifes
  • Mika Ninagawa (born 1972), brightly coloured photographs of flowers, goldfish and landscapes, commercially successful in fashion and advertising
  • Rika Noguchi (born 1971), landscape photographer
  • Yoshino Ōishi (born 1944), widely travelled photojournalist
  • Yuki Onodera (born 1962), images of everyday objects such as old clothes, tin cans, birds, houses shining in the darkness, and human figures[2]
  • Kei Orihara (born 1948), documentary and portrait photographer, has published books on life in New York, and books for children about the disabled
  • Tsuneko Sasamoto (born 1914), Japan's first female photojournalist, has photographed some of the country's greatest personalities and historic moments[3]
  • Shima Ryū (1823–1899), earliest known Japanese woman photographer, photographed her husband in 1864, later opened a studio in Kiryū
  • Mieko Shiomi (1909–1984), abstraction and realism, known for her monochrome compositions
  • Kunié Sugiura (born 1942), creator of photograms
  • Cozue Takagi (born 1985), creator of montages
  • Toyoko Tokiwa (born 1930), best known for her depiction of the red-light district of post-occupation Yokohama, for a clientele of US servicemen
  • Hitomi Watanabe (渡辺 眸 Watanabe Hitomi, born 1939)
  • Eiko Yamazawa (1899–1995), portrait photographer and founder of a photography school
  • Miwa Yanagi (born 1967), staged events with women of various ages, frequently using the computer to alter the image in strange ways, several published series including Elevator Girls
  • Ruiko Yoshida (born 1938), has published several photobooks designed to fight against discrimination towards the poor and blacks, best known for Harlem Black Angels[4]

Latvia

  • Inta Ruka (born 1958), specializing in portraits of people in the areas where they live

Lithuania

Luxembourg

  • Marianne Majerus (born 1956), specializes in garden photography contributing widely to magazines and newspapers

Mexico

  • Lola Álvarez Bravo (1907–1993), documentary images of village life, director of photography at the Mexican National Arts Institute
  • Ana Casas Broda (born 1965), known for Kinderwunsch photography series
  • Blanca Charolet (born 1953), photojournalist and portrait photographer
  • Flor Garduño (born 1957), especially documenting native peoples, portraits of women[5]
  • Maya Goded (born 1967), especially documenting people from hidden or shunned communities
  • Lourdes Grobet (born 1940), has made a study of lucha libre
  • Graciela Iturbide (born 1942), shows everyday life, especially that of indigenous peoples
  • Teresa Margolles (born 1963), portrays death
  • Cristina Goettsch Mittermeier (born 1966), marine biologist and conservation photographer, founder International League of Conservation Photographers
  • Tina Modotti (1896–1942), see Italy
  • Dulce Pinzon (born 1974), Mexican and Latin immigrants in the United States, figures dressed as superheroes
  • Mariana Yampolsky (1925–2002), travel photography and documentary work on Mexico's rural areas

Netherlands

  • Emmy Andriesse (1914–1953), noted for her clandestine photography of the Netherlands under Nazi rule
  • Katharina Behrend (1888–1973), German-born Dutch amateur photographer, wide variety of genres including a nude self-portrait
  • Eva Besnyö (1910–2002), Dutch-Hungarian photographer active in the Dutch "New Photography" movement
  • Ania Bien (born 1946), see United States
  • Marrie Bot (born 1946), pilgrimages, mentally handicapped, multicultural funeral and mourning rituals
  • Rineke Dijkstra (born 1959), portraits of adolescents
  • Jacqueline Hassink (born 1966), visual artist, noted for her Table of Power projects related to the world economy; also lectures on photography
  • Ata Kandó (1913–2017), noted for her "Dream in the Wood" fantasy photos, Hungarian refugee photos and Amazonian indigenous images
  • Inez van Lamsweerde (born 1963), fashion photographer
  • Dana Lixenberg (born 1964), portrait photographer
  • Alexandrine Tinné (1835–1869), first female photographer in the Netherlands, produced large images in The Hague
  • Ans Westra (born 1936), see New Zealand

New Zealand

  • Suzanna Clarke (born 1961), freelance photojournalist based in Australia, contributing to many international journals, also travel photography in Asia and Europe
  • Eileen Olive Deste (1908–1986), born in the UK, started a photography business in Dunedin in 1930, later in Wellington where she covered the New Zealand Centennial Exhibition
  • Marti Friedlander (1928–2016), emigrated from England to New Zealand in 1958; photographed and documented New Zealand's people, places and events
  • Amy Merania Harper (1900–1998), ran Auckland's Amy Harper Studios from 1928, notable bridal photography and portraits, founding member of the New Zealand Professional Photographers’ Association
  • Alyson Hunter (born 1948), now in London, developed a new etching technique for street scenes, later standard portraiture
  • Thelma Rene Kent (1899–1946), landscapes, especially South Island heights, also photographed animals and birds
  • Elizabeth Pulman (1836–1900), possibly New Zealand's first female photographer, studio in Auckland from the late 1860s, portraits and landscapes of historical interest
  • Jane Ussher (born 1953), portraits, New Zealand Listener's chief photographer, also photographed Scott's and Shackleton's Antarctic expedition huts
  • Ans Westra (born 1936), emigrated from the Netherlands in 1957, documentary photographer, known for her images of the Māori

Nigeria

Norway

Palestine

  • Karimeh Abbud (1896–1955), professional photographer in Nazareth in the 1930s, also producing postcards
  • Sama Raena Alshaibi (born 1973), Iraq-born Palestinian–US conceptual artist, using photography, also an academic
  • Rula Halawani (born 1964), photographer, photojournalist, educator
  • Emily Jacir, artist in photography and other media, also an academic
  • Ahlam Shibli (born 1970), photographer of Bedouins of Palestinian descent

Peru

Poland

  • Leopoldyna Janusz (1862–1934)
  • Lotte Beese
  • Ania Bien (born 1946), see United States
  • Margaret Michaelis-Sachs (1902–1985), Austrian-Australian photographer of Polish-Jewish origin, portraits, architecture of Barcelona, Jewish quarter in Cracow
  • Nata Piaskowski (1912–2004), Polish-born American photographer, portraits and landscapes, based in San Francisco
  • Zofia Rydet (1911–1997) documented postwar Poland
  • Faye Schulman, took photos during World War II

Romania

  • Alexandra Croitoru (born 1975), seeks to challenge accepted ideas of power sharing and gender in Romania

Russia

Singapore

South Africa

  • Jodi Bieber (born 1966), known for taking the photograph of Bibi Aisha, the Afghanistan woman whose nose and ears were mutilated by her husband and brother-in-law
  • Vera Elkan (1908–2008), remembered for her images of the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War
  • Constance Stuart Larrabee (1914–2000), South African's first female World War II correspondent, also known for images of South Africa
  • Zanele Muholi (born 1972), has used photography in support of LGBTI issues, several solo and group exhibitions since 2004
  • Neo Ntsoma (born 1972), known for being the first woman recipient of the Mohamed Amin Award, the CNN African Journalist of the Year Prize Photography
  • Colla Swart (born 1930), photographs of people, landscapes and flowers in Namaqualand
  • Nontsikelelo Veleko (born 1977), depicts black identity
  • Gisèle Wulfsohn (1957–2011), covered the struggle against apartheid and HIV/AIDS awareness initiatives

South Korea

  • Nikki S. Lee (born 1970), self-portraits posing in various ethnic and social groups such as punks, hip-hop musicians, male partners

Spain

Sweden

  • Sofia Ahlbom (1803–1868), feminist, practiced as a photographer from the 1860s
  • Ingrid Falk (born 1960), installation artist
  • Marianne Greenwood (1916–2006), photographed Picasso and other artists in Antibes after the Second World War, later photographing the peoples of the Pacific islands and parts of Asia
  • Brita Sofia Hesselius (1801–1866), Sweden's first professional female photographer, opening a studio in Karlstad in 1845
  • Tuija Lindström (born 1950), noted for her black-and-white pictures of women in a black lake addressing feminist issues
  • Elisabeth Ohlson (born 1961), photographs sexual minorities, noted for her 1998 Ecce Homo portraying Jesus among homosexuals
  • Anna Riwkin-Brick (1908–1970), portrait and dance photography, photo-journalistic work
  • Hilda Sjölin (1835–1915), one of Sweden's first professional female photographers, opening a studio in Malmö in 1861
  • Bertha Valerius (1835–1915), official photographer of the Royal Swedish court

Switzerland

Turkey

  • Semiha Es (1912–2012), Turkey's first female photojournalist, worked between 1950 and 1970s as a war photographer
  • Maryam Şahinyan (1911–1996), Turkey's first female photographer, managing a studio from 1937, archive of some 200,000 images
  • Naciye Suman (1881–1973), Turkey's first Muslim female photographer, owning a studio from 1919 to 1930

Ukraine

  • Elena Filatova (born 1974), photographs of the Chernobyl area
  • Anya Teixeira (1913–1992), took up amateur photography in London when 47, often working with children and actors, also founded the Creative Photo Group

United Kingdom

  • Sarah Angelina Acland (1849–1930), an amateur photographer who pioneered colour in Gibraltar in 1903 and 1904 and later in Madeira
  • Heather Angel (born 1941), British nature photographer
  • Anna Atkins (1799–1871), a botanist, the first person to publish a book illustrated with photographic images
  • Lisa Barnard (born 1967), documentary photographer, political artist, and senior lecturer on documentary photography at University of South Wales
  • Emma Barton (1872–1938), portrait photographer, autochromes, awarded the Royal Photographic Society Medal in 1903
  • Hélène Binet (born 1959), see Switzerland
  • Dorothy Bohm (born 1924), originally from Königsberg, initially portraits, later street photography, from 1985 in colour
  • Carla Borel (born 1973), known for her portraiture and black-and-white street photography, particularly in Soho, London.
  • Jane Bown (born 1925), notable portrait photographer, also worked for The Observer
  • Zana Briski (born 1966), documentary, especially insects
  • Christina Broom (1862–1939), said to be Britain's first female press photographer
  • Juno Calypso (born 1989), uses self-portraits to make work about feminism
  • Evelyn Cameron (1868–1928), see United States
  • Julia Margaret Cameron (1815–1879), notable early work, closely cropped portraits of celebrities, 800 of her works owned by the Royal Photographic Society
  • Natasha Caruana (born 1983)
  • Sue Darlow (1960–2011), Indian-born British photographer
  • Siân Davey (born 1964), documentary photographer
  • Corinne Day (1962–2010), fashion and documentary photographer
  • Frances Sally Day (c1816–1892), first woman to photograph Queen Victoria
  • Susan Derges (born 1955), photographic artist, camera-less photography
  • Eileen Olive Deste (1908–1986), see New Zealand
  • Mary Dillwyn (1816–1906), the earliest female photographer in Wales
  • Olive Edis (1876–1955), portraits and early autochromes, diascope viewer
  • Laura El-Tantawy (1980), see Egypt
  • Candice Farmer (born c. 1970), underwater fashion photographer
  • Mary Georgina Filmer (1838–1903), early proponent of photomontage
  • Mary Fitzpatrick (born 1968), known for her work on spaces abandoned after conflict
  • Anna Fox (born 1961), office life in London, "Made in" series on Milton Keynes, Kansas, Gothenburg and Florence
  • Constance Fox Talbot (1811–1880), wife of Henry Fox Talbot, experimented with photography as early as 1839
  • Jill Furmanovsky (born 1953), see Zimbabwe
  • Paula Rae Gibson (born 1968), art photography
  • Fay Godwin (1931–2005), leading British landscape photographer of her day
  • Clementina Hawarden (1822–1865), notable portrait photographer in the 1860s, predating Julia Margaret Cameron
  • Alice Hughes (1857–1939), leading London portrait photographer specializing in images of fashionable women and children
  • Alyson Hunter (born 1948), see New Zealand
  • Elsbeth Juda (born 1911), fashion photographer
  • Roshini Kempadoo (born 1959), photographer, media artist, and lecturer
  • Etheldreda Laing (1872–1960), early autochrome photographs
  • Marianne Majerus (born 1956), see Luxembourg
  • Kirsty Mackay, documentary photographer
  • Jessie Mann, studio assistant of the Scottish photographers David Octavius Hill and Robert Adamson; a strong candidate as the first Scottish woman photographer and one of the first women anywhere to be involved in photography
  • Chloe Dewe Mathews (born 1982), documentary photographer
  • Mary McCartney (born 1969), ballet dancers, Spice Girls
  • Wendy McMurdo (born 1962), exploring the relationship between technology and identity
  • Lotte Meitner-Graf (1899–1973), portrait photographer in Vienna until 1937 when she came to London, Great Britain
  • Inge Morath (1923–2002), see Austria
  • Caroline Emily Nevill (1829–1827), early photographer and pioneering member of the Photographic Exchange Club
  • Laura Pannack (born 1985), social documentaries and portraits
  • Sarah Pickering (born 1972)
  • Terri Quaye (born 1940), musician, ethnographic photographer
  • Franki Raffles (1955–1994), feminist social documentary photographer
  • Suze Randall (born 1946), erotic photographer
  • Sophy Rickett (born 1970), installation artist and photographer
  • Grace Robertson (born 1930), photojournalist contributing to Picture Post and Life in the 1950s
  • Ellen Rogers (born 1983), portrait and fashion photographer
  • Mary Rosse (1813–1885), began experimenting with photography in 1842
  • Jane Martha St. John (1801–1882), known for her 1856 calotypes of Rome and other towns in Italy, now in the J. Paul Getty Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Khadija Saye (30 July 1992–14 June 2017), see Gambia
  • Pennie Smith (born c. 1949), black-and-white portraits, rock groups
  • Jo Spence (1934–1992), known for her self-portraits depicting her fight against cancer
  • Marilyn Stafford (born 1925), photojournalist and fashion photographer
  • Hannah Starkey (born 1971), staged settings of women in city environments
  • Clare Strand (born 1973), conceptual photographer
  • Maud Sulter (1960–2008), fine artist, photographer, writer and curator
  • Mitra Tabrizian (born 1959), see Iran
  • Sam Taylor-Wood (born 1967), art photography, portraits
  • Anya Teixeira (1913–1992), see Ukraine
  • Tessa Traeger (born 1938), still life, food and portrait photography
  • Edith Tudor-Hart (1908–1973), see Austria
  • Agnes Warburg (1872–1953), influential early colour photographer
  • Gillian Wearing (born 1963), conceptual artist also working with photography, video and installations
  • Jane Wigley (1820–1883), early photographer opening studios in Newcastle and London in the mid-1840s
  • Val Wilmer (born 1941), writer-photographer specialising in jazz, gospel, blues, and British African-Caribbean music and culture
  • Vanessa Winship (born 1960), portraiture and landscapes, particularly in Turkey, Georgia and the US
  • Catherine Yass (born 1963), bright colour, images often a combination of the positive and negative, subjects ranging from toilets to empty cinemas and Bollywood stars
  • Madame Yevonde (1893–1975), pioneered colour in portrait photography, including a series of guests at a party dressed as Roman and Greek gods and goddesses

United States

Uzbekistan

  • Umida Akhmedova (born 1955), photojournalist working in Central Asia, arrested in 2010 for her images of the Uzbek people

Zimbabwe

References

  1. Ann Elliott Sherman, "Something Fishy", Metro, 17 August 2000. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  2. "Yuki Onodera" (2005), The National Museum of Art, Osaka. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  3. Lucy Birmingham, "The ‘plucky pioneer’ of photojournalism", The Japan Times, 24 September 2010. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  4. "Ruiko Yoshida", Woman.type.jp. (in Japanese) Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  5. "Flor Garduño". florgarduno.com. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
  6. Jim Casper, "New Photography from Norway and Beyond" Archived 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine., LensCulture. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  7. John Leland. "Looking Like Lincoln". The New York Times.

Further reading

  • Sullivan, Constance (1990). Women photographers. New York: Abrams. ISBN 0-8109-3950-9. OCLC 21042087.
  • Rosenblum, Naomi (2000). A history of women photographers. 2nd ed. New York: Abbeville Publishing Group (Abbeville Press, Inc.). ISBN 0-7892-0658-7. OCLC 43729073.
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