List of Swedish women photographers

This is a list of women photographers who were born in Sweden or whose works are closely associated with that country.

A

  • Sofia Ahlbom (1803–1868), feminist, practiced as a photographer from the 1860s

B

D

F

G

  • Marianne Greenwood (1916–2006), photographed Picasso and other artists in Antibes after the Second World War, later photographing the peoples of the Pacific islands and parts of Asia

H

J

  • Selma Jacobsson (1841-1899), royal court photographer
  • Lina Jonn (1861–1896), early Swedish professional photographer in Helsingborg and Lund, remembered for her documentary work

K

L

  • Wilhelmina Lagerholm (1826–1917), portrait and genre painter, photographer
  • Annika Larsson (born 1972), contemporary artist, photographer
  • Tuija Lindström (born 1950), noted for her black-and-white pictures of women in a black lake addressing feminist issues

O

R

  • Mathilda Ranch (1860–1938), early professional photographer who ran studios in Varberg and the surrounding area
  • Anna Riwkin-Brick (1908–1970), portrait and dance photography, photo-journalistic work

S

T

  • Maria Tesch (1850–1936), professional photographer, studio in Linköping
  • Ida Trotzig (1864–1943), photographer, ethnographer, Japanologist, painter and writer

V

  • Bertha Valerius (1835–1915), official photographer of the Royal Swedish court

W

gollark: It's also possible that more complex systems may have been impractical before computers came along, although that doesn't apply to, say, approval voting.
gollark: First-past-the-post is the simplest and most obvious thing you're likely to imagine if you want people to "vote for things", and it's entirely possible people didn't look too hard.
gollark: I don't know if the people designing electoral systems actually did think of voting systems which are popular now and discard them, but it's not *that* much of a reason to not adopt new ones.
gollark: There are plenty of things in, say, maths, which could have been thought up ages ago, and seem stupidly obvious now, but weren't. Such as modern place value notation.
gollark: Obvious things now may just not have been then.

See also

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