Artistic Female Photography

Artistic Female Photography




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Jone Johnson Lewis is a women's history writer who has been involved with the women's movement since the late 1960s. She is a former faculty member of the Humanist Institute.
Women have been part of the photography world since Constance Talbot took and developed photographs in the 1840s. These women made a name for themselves as artists through their work with photography. They're listed alphabetically.
(1898–1991) Berenice Abbott is known for her photographs of New York, for her portraits of notable artists including James Joyce and for promoting the work of French photographer Eugene Atget. 
(1923–1971) Diane Arbus is known for her photographs of unusual subjects and for portraits of celebrities. 
(1904–1971) Margaret Bourke-White is remembered for her iconic images of the Great Depression, World War II, Buchenwald concentration camp survivors and Gandhi at his spinning wheel. (Some of her famous photos are here: Margaret Bourke-White photo gallery.) Bourke-White was the first woman war photographer and the first woman photographer allowed to accompany a combat mission.
(1956– ) Anne Geddes, from Australia, is known for photographs of babies in costumes, often using digital manipulation to include natural images, especially flowers. 
(1895–1965) Dorothy Lange's documentary photographs of the Great Depression, especially the well-known "Migrant Mother" image, helped focus attention on the human devastation of that time.
(1949– ) Annie Leibovitz turned a hobby into a career. She's most famous for celebrity portraits which have often been featured in major magazines.
(1799–1871) Anna Atkins published the first book illustrated with photographs, and has been claimed to be the first woman photographer (Constance Talbot also vies for this honor). 
(1815–1875) She was 48 years old when she began working with the new medium. Because of her position in Victorian English society, in her short career she was able to photograph many legendary figures. She approached photography as an artist, claiming Raphael and Michelangelo as inspirations. She was also business-savvy, copyrighting all her photographs to be sure she'd get credit. 
(1883–1976) American photographer for 75 years, she was known for pictures of people and plants. 
(1851 - 1938) Susan Eakins was a painter, but also an early photographer, often working with her husband. 
(1953 - ) Nan Goldin's photographs have depicted gender-bending, the effects of AIDS, and her own life of sex, drugs and abusive relationships. 
(1967–) Canadian born and raised in the U.S., Jill Greenberg's photographs, and her artistic manipulation of them before publishing, has sometimes been controversial. 
(1852–1934) Gertrude Käsebier was known for her portraits, especially in natural settings, and for a professional disagreement with Alfred Stieglitz over considering commercial photography as art. 
(1945–) Barbara Kruger has combined photographic images with other materials and words to make statements about politics, feminism, and other social issues. 
 Gray Gallery / Wikimedia Commons / CCA by 2.0 Generic
(1913–2009) Helen Levitt's street photography of New York City life began with taking pictures of children's chalk drawings. Her work became better known in the 1960s. Levitt also made several films in the 1940s through 1970s.
Sotheby's / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
(1905–1997) Dorothy Norman was a writer and photographer -- mentored by Alfred Stieglitz who was also her lover though both were married -- and also a prominent New York social activist. She's especially known for photographs of famous people, including Jawaharlal Nehru, whose writings she also published. She published the first full-length biography of Stieglitz.
(1902–2003) Leni Riefenstahl is better known as Hitler's propagandist with her filmmaking, Leni Reifenstahl disclaimed any knowledge of or responsibility for the Holocaust. In 1972, she photographed the Munich Olympics for the London Times. In 1973 she published Die Nuba, a book of photographs of the Nuba peple of southern Sudan, and in 1976, another book of photographs, The People of Kan. 
(1954–) Cindy Sherman, a New York City based photographer, has produced photographs (often featuring herself as the subject in costumes) that examine the roles of women in society. She was a 1995 recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship. She's also worked in film. Married to director Michel Auder from 1984 to 1999, she's more recently been linked to musician David Byrne.
(1960–) Lorna Simpson, an African American photographer based in New York, has often focused in her work on multiculturalism and race and gender identity.
(1811–1880) The earliest known photographic portrait on paper was taken by William Fox Talbot on October 10, 1840 – and his wife, Constance Talbot, was the subject. Constance Talbot also took and developed photographs, as her husband researched processes and materials to more effectively take photographs, and thus has sometimes been called the first woman photographer.
(1882–1934) Doris Ulmann's photographs of the people, crafts and arts of Appalachia during the Depression era help to document that era. Earlier, she had photographed Appalachian and other Southern rural people, including in the Sea Islands. She was as much ethnographer as photographer in her work. She, like several other notable photographers, was educated at the Ethical Culture Fieldston School and Columbia University.
Lewis, Jone Johnson. "21 Key Women Photographers You Should Know." ThoughtCo, Feb. 22, 2021, thoughtco.com/women-photographers-3529945. Lewis, Jone Johnson. (2021, February 22). 21 Key Women Photographers You Should Know. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/women-photographers-3529945 Lewis, Jone Johnson. "21 Key Women Photographers You Should Know." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/women-photographers-3529945 (accessed July 31, 2021).
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There is Glamour Photography and Intimate Glamour Photography. There is Exotic Photography, Celebrity Photography, and Erotic Photography. There is Fashion and Commercial Photography, Model Photography and even Artistic Photography. These are all terms with somewhat distinct meanings but which point at the incredible interest in and consumption of the Female Body in these various forms of its portrayal. When you add the words exotic and erotic to photography, it leans toward the sexual. Then there are also art photos, Artistic Female Photos, perhaps interpretive, sometimes sexual but sometimes focusing on the models soul rather than her body. There are also Pin-up Models and of course, Playboy Models.
I want to try to point out specific differences in photography relating to the correct use of words such as ‘exotic,’ ‘glamour,’ ‘erotic’ and ‘sensual’ here, in particular. The word erotic, for instance, has come into widespread misuse, regarding both erotic photography and even erotic stories. This is partially because of the overuse it has been given on the Internet especially by adult sites. Adult venues have “adopted” the term erotic and used it enough to describe their wares that it has taken on a broader meaning than had ever been ascribed to it in the past. Many adult sites may indeed contain erotic photography but in its true meaning erotic photography does not even necessarily include nude photography. Correctly used, in fact, erotic photography perhaps arouses sexuality but does not necessarily display it.
Naturally, most people believe what they see rather than challenging the definition of a word which may be vague in their understanding anyhow. So when they repeatedly see the words erotic photography attached to graphic sexual content they associate the two things as one in their mind. Erotic Photography could be more correctly describes as “Sensual,” which has more to do with the feelings evoked by a photo rather than the actions depicted in it.
The term “exotic Photography” really has to do with a sense of distance or the unusual. A photo might more logically be called exotic due to the type of unique clothing featured in the photo rather than the models lack of clothing. The model herself may have an exotic look or appearance. Glamour Photography requires a sense of glamour, and a sense of the world as a venue for glamour. Glamour photography may or may not be erotic, exotic or sensual. Glamour photography is about the photographer allowing the model to reach inside herself for the exact expression necessary for the particular feeling which is to be conveyed in the photo.
To summarize, in general, words have a specific meaning. In practice, though, meanings change. Erotic Photography, even erotic stories are meanings in flux. Exotic photography is more distinct and leans toward the unusual. Glamour photography is bringing a sense of the glamorous to the art of photography. It usually results from the unique collaboration of a Glamour photographer with a model able to react from inside herself to convey an idea or feeling within a photograph. Sensual photography is what should be described in the term erotic photography but for the common misuse of the term currently. Erotic photography and erotic stories, correctly used, do not imply prurient sexual activity.
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