
Jannica Honey’s work is often concerned with the female body and the place of women in society. Her recent work “When the Blackbird Sings” (2016-2017) focuses on the female body and its links with nature.
Jannica Honey’s work is often concerned with the female body and the place of women in society. Her recent work “When the Blackbird Sings” (2016-2017) focuses on the female body and its links with nature.
Hungarian-British photographer, Mari Mahr, shares her work The Dreamer’s Birthday, created for her late mother.
From Being Inbetween, which is a continually evolving series of photographic portraits of girls aged between ten and twelve, exploring the complex transition between childhood and young adulthood
“I come across so many amazing women in photography, and yet their voice is nowhere near as powerful as their male counterparts,” says Del Barrett, vice-president of The Royal Photographic Society.
British photographer Maryam Wahid explores her identity as a South Asian Muslim.
Taten Statt Worte – Deeds not Words; how Elaine Pringle-Schwitter used her admiration for the suffragettes to raise money for women’s charities.
TEDx talk where nominated heroine, Denise Wozmiak, shares her moving story about how photography helped her through post-traumatic stress after she lost her six month old baby to AIDS.
I’ve come to photography just as I’d come to motherhood: a bit later in life than I otherwise might have planned. When I picked up a camera for the first time in decades, I felt most comfortable exploring landscape. I was particularly drawn to farmlands I’d witnessed undergoing repeated cycles of implantation, fecundity and harvest while I looked on season after season with a mixture of envy and hope.