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There are a good proportion of people today who would argue that anybody who posts a ‘shameless selfie’ on Instgram is basically a self-portrait photographer . In past decades the process, the meaning and the value of the self-portrait has evolved hugely, especially for female artists. Early examples like Claude Cahun introduced a hybrid of surrealism and gender experimentation into the art scene, while contemporaries like the late-Jo Spence used their images to document their personal battles with identity and illness. In honour of such revolutionaries, here’s our breakdown of the most brilliant portraits by female artists.
Cindy Sherman is renowned for her ability to transform herself – from black and white Stepford wife to multicoloured clown – the New Jersey-born photographer's ability to experiment with identity is most famously chronicled in her work “Untitled Film Stills”. Shot between 1977 and 1980, her images can be traced back to her childhood where – feeling depressed as a young woman — the photographer would dress herself up as different characters as a form of escapism. It was only when her boyfriend at the time suggested she start documenting it did Sherman really see herself as a photographer; a step that transformed her into one of the most applauded visionaries in the world today.
Polly Penrose took self-portraits for several years before exhibiting them to anybody – first revealing them by entering a series titled “Nude” to a competition run by the London Photographic Association . Her first solo exhibition of nude self-portraits, titled “ A Body of Work ”, was held just one year ago. A world away from the usual hyper-sexualised image of the female form, Penrose creates surreal images by fitting herself into the most obdurate of places and positions, calling them a “physical conversation between (herself) and the space”. Using her medium to express her anxiety and mental health battles she faced after childbirth, Penrose’s images provide liberation to women who feel ashamed with their bodies .
Vivian Maier is one of the 20th century's most influential photographers, and also one of its most mysterious. Described as ‘a riddle, wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma’ , the American street photographer lived an understated life as a nanny to three boys and it wasn’t until her passing in 2009 that anyone even knew Maier was a photographer. Leaving behind more than 100,000 images documenting Chicago life in the 60s, the images were unearthed when an art collector bid $380 on a box of her negatives and posted them on flickr, and they went viral. Preferring the street to the studio, it was there that she captured some of her most haunting self-portraits. The original pioneer of the mirror selfie, Maier shot in shop window reflections and retail mirrors, all of which added an incredible sense of depth to her photos.
Hobbes Ginsberg – recently interviewed and featured in the summer issue of Dazed – is a Los Angeles-based freelance photographer and member of cyber art collective The Coven . Although identifying as queer and pushing the gender dialogue forward through her work, Ginsberg admits she gets frustrated when the conversation about her photography ends there . Her work explores not only personal issues with anxiety and depression, but also her experience of evolving as a person and an artist. Adorning her portraits with beautiful, gaudy colours and an essence of punk, Ginsberg takes any negativity and channels them into her photography, creating something much more positive and transient.
Francesca Woodman, a Colorado born photographer of the late 60s and mid-70s, took her first portrait at age 13 and continued to produce around 800 more images until her untimely death at just 22-years-old. She is best known for her ghostly black and white self-portraits – a figure crouched in the corner or a blur across the lens – Woodman used herself as a tool to draw the eye of the spectator to a specific point in her images. Her techniques have gone on to influences contemporary photographers of today – including Cindy Sherman , who has been known to cite Woodman’s work as inspiration.
iiu Susiraja has recently emerged on the Finnish photography scene with a distinctive take on self-portraits, focusing on creating the message that “the abnormal may be normal”. Claiming that life is her muse, and calling her art a “ playful anarchism ”, Susiraja’s self-portraits are wonderfully bizarre. Her series titled “Good Behaviour” exhibits her posing with a range of household items – from a broom under her boobs to baguettes in her hat – Susiraja uses her portraits to examine the relationships between women and the domestic home.
Claude Cahun was a French artist and writer who used her self-portraits to break down perceptions of gender, producing work as early as the 1900s. Ahead of her time in challenging ideals, she dressed for the camera, experimenting with the image of an androgynous woman, as well as feminine male – begging us to question the identity in her images. She rejected labels, even down to being called an artist, using her portraits to express this rebuttal of convention.
British photographer Jo Spence started her career in the 60s as a commercial photographer's assistant before shifting towards self-documentation. Two of her most jarring series, “A Picture of Health” and “Cancer Shock”, exhibit some of the more raw and personal self-portraits in contemporary photography. Collaborating with collaborator, friend and now-owner of her estate, Terry Dennett, she used the camera to track the stages of her mental and physical deterioration after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 1982. Continuing to work right up until her death in 1992, she completed her collection “The Final Project” as a response to her illness. Within this, she produced portraits with undertones of death, expressing what she called the “unrepresentable.”
Through this provocative self-portrait from her series “The Hairless Norm”, Petra Collins explores why, when girls start to get hormones, develop boobs, and grow pubic hair, they are told to strip it all back and revert to a more childlike image of themselves. The American artist addresses this social discomfort with female body hair by displaying it, and evolving the image with layers of pastels, pinks, and silver, to create a dreamy portrait with an undertone of feminist politics. Collins also uses the medium of the self-portrait to tackle conventional ideas of the female image, as well as the taboos of teenage sexuality .
This iconic French photographer of the late 70s was the daughter of Romanian immigrants and circus performers. She emerged on the Parisian art scene with a range black and white images of women, then appeared to combine surrealism and erotica. All female figures in her work, whilst exposing themselves to the camera, seem to have a look of vagueness and of disinterest with the spectator. In her own portraits, she adopted the same eerie stance, creating an unnerving and evocative image for her spectator.






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Published: 01:39 GMT, 24 November 2014 | Updated: 11:35 GMT, 24 November 2014
They're taking selfies, getting naked, sunbaking, passing out and drinking loads of alcohol - welcome to Schoolies 2014.
Roughly 30,000 school leavers have flocked to Queensland's Gold Coast for the notorious week-long celebrations and many are documenting it all on social media for the world to see.
Teenagers from across Australia are taking to Facebook and Instagram to post their embarrassing and sometimes hilarious party antics, despite warnings they might regret it later on.
Roughly 30,000 school leavers have flocked to Queensland's Gold Coast for the notorious week-long celebrations and many are documenting it all on social media for the world to see
Many are taking to social media to post photos on hotel balconies without pants or tops
Social media sites have been set up specifically to share those awkward schoolies photos, with some asking for people to send in shots of themselves and their friends.
Facebook pages like Schoolies 2014 Exposed and Embarrassing Schoolies Photos are filled with photos of drunk young men and women, teens partying on hotel balconies and some even in compromising positions.
Support group Red Frogs spends the weeks leading up to Schoolies educating school leavers on the potential negative repercussions of sharing certain types of photos. 
Despite warnings they might regret posting photos, Schoolies don't appear to be fazed or ashamed of their photos
This year's batch of Schoolies are taking selfies, getting naked, sunbaking, passing out and drinking loads of alcohol
Teenagers from across Australia are taking to Facebook and Instagram to post their embarrassing, hilarious and just plain strange party antics
Social media sites have been set up specifically to share those awkward schoolies photos
Some social media pages are asking for people to send in embarrassing shots of themselves and their friends
 These guys bragged on social media about trying to crash an official Schoolies events on the Gold Coast
Red Frogs gives out information on how to update your Facebook privacy settings in order to pre-approve photos before they're posted. 
But it seems to have fallen on deaf ears for many partygoers if the social media hashtags are anything to go by. 
Since Friday night there have been a total of 45 Schoolies arrested for street and drug offences. 
Facebook pages like Schoolies 2014 Exposed and Embarrassing Schoolies Photos are filled with photos of drunk young men and women
Teens partying on hotel balconies and some even in compromising positions are flooding social media
Hundreds of teenagers are documenting their week-long party stints on Instagram
This shot of three friends sharing a bubble bath at their Schoolies hotel was sent to the Embarrassing Schoolies Photos Facebook page
Support group Red Frogs spends the weeks leading up to Schoolies educating school leavers on the potential negative repercussions of sharing certain types of photos
Thousands are sharing selfies from across the Gold Coast
Hotel pool parties are renowned during Schoolies celebrations
Schoolies revellers always spill out onto the streets where 'Toolies' are often found partying amongst them
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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group

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