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Semiha Es (1912–2012), Turkey's first female photojournalist, worked between 1950 and 1970s as a war photographer; Yıldız Moran (1932–1995) Maryam Şahinyan (1911–1996), Turkey's first female photographer, managing a studio from 1937, archive of some 200,000 images
Evelyn Cameron (1868–1928), British born photographer who moved to Terry, Montana where she documented everyday life in the Old West; Angela Cappetta, American photographer; Ellen Carey (born 1952), abstract photographer; Marion Carpenter (1920–2002), the first female national press photographer and the first woman to cover the White House
Billy Name (1940–2016) Arnold Newman (1918–2006) Marvin E. Newman (1927–2023) Lora Webb Nichols (1883–1962) Nicholas Nixon (born 1947) James B. Norman (born 1952) Zak Noyle (born 1985) Lee Nye (1926–1999) Pipo Nguyen-duy (born 1962) Nic Nicosia (born 1951) Michael O'Brien (born 1950) Catherine Opie (born 1961) Charles O'Rear (born ...
One page that is dedicated to celebrating photography from history is Old-Time Photos on Facebook. This account shares digitized versions of photos from the late 1800s all the way up to the 1980s.
Ruth Matilda Anderson (1893 – 1983), a graduate of the Clarence H. White School of Photography, starts taking more than 14.000 documentary photographs of rural life in early 20th-century Spain for the Hispanic Society of America. Her work has found appreciation after her death in exhibitions and catalogs.
Later, in collaboration with Roger Fry, Woolf also edited the first major collection of Cameron's photographs, Victorian Photographs of Famous Men and Fair Women, published in 1926. [3] [28] In the introduction to this collection, Fry wrote that Cameron's allegorical photographs "must all be judged as failures from an aesthetic viewpoint".
Florence Owens Thompson (born Florence Leona Christie; September 1, 1903 – September 16, 1983) was an American woman who was the subject of Dorothea Lange's photograph Migrant Mother (1936), considered an iconic image of the Great Depression.
One of the first female photographers to open a studio in New York City was Alice Boughton who had studied both art and photography at the Pratt School of Art and Design. In 1890, she opened a studio on East 23rd Street becoming one of the city's most distinguished portrait photographers. [38]