Mousiendi |
Chorus Call 1978 TVX NonSex 1 DO Hot Nurses 1976 Caballero Home Video IR 1 DRO Love in Strange Places 1976 Caballero Home Video IR RO New York City Woman 1979 VCA Clip Odyssey 1977 VCX NonSex 2 DRO Visions 1977 Quality-X-Video BJOnly IR DRO This is a timeline of women in photography tracing the major contributions women have made to both the development of photography and the outstanding photographs they have created over the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries. Early 19th-century pioneers 1839 United Kingdom Sarah Anne Bright (1793–1866) produces what is possibly the earliest surviving photographic image taken by a women.[1] United KingdomConstance Fox Talbot (1811–1880), wife of the inventor Henry Fox Talbot, experiments with the process of photography, possibly becoming the first woman to take a photograph.[2] 1842 SwitzerlandFranziska Möllinger (1817–1880) becomes the first female photographer in Switzerland, taking daguerreotypes of Swiss scenes which she publishes as lithographs in 1844.[3] 1843 United KingdomAnna Atkins (1799–1871), also a friend of Henry Fox Talbot, publishes Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions, the first book with photographic illustrations.[4] GermanyBertha Beckmann (1815–1901), opens a studio in Leipzig, running the business herself from his death in 1847. 1844 ScotlandJessie Mann (1805–1867) takes a photograph of the King of Saxony, probably becoming the first woman photographer in Scotland.[6] 1845 SwedenBrita Sofia Hesselius (1801–1866) makes daguerreotypes in her photographic studio in Karlstad, moving her studio to Stockholm in 1857.[7] 1847 FranceGeneviève Élisabeth Disdéri (c.1817–1878) assists her husband André-Adolphe-Eugène Disdéri in their Brest studio, later operating the business alone.[8] 1848 United StatesSarah Louise Judd (1802–c.1881) makes daguerreotypes in spring 1848, continuing for two years in Stillwater, Minnesota.[9] 1849 CanadaElise L'Heureux (1827–1896), together with her husband, sets up a daguerreotype studio in Quebec City, taking over the business in 1865.[10] Sarah Anne Bright's Quillan Leaf (1839) Anna Atkins' photogram of Algae (1843) Franziska Möllinger's daguerreotype of Thun Castle (c.1844) Geneviève Élisabeth Disdéri's Interior of St Mathieu (1869) Later 19th-century 1850 United StatesJulia Shannon (c. 1812 – c. 1852), the first known woman photographer in California, advertises her work with daguerreotypes in 1850. DenmarkThora Hallager (1821–1884) begins making daguerreotypes in Copenhagen, opening her own studio around 1857.[11] 1852 GermanyEmilie Bieber (1810–1884) opens a daguerreotype studio in Hamburg.[12] SwedenMarie Kinnberg opens a daguerreotype studio in Gothenburg.
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