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Assembling over 2,000 photographs of daily life in reproductive health clinics, Winant centers routine labor as an essential act of care.
In the 1990s, the photographer spoofed corporate culture through performances staged in locations around Tokyo.
Inspired by 2000s-era teen-girl magazines, Elizabeth Renstrom uses a mix of real and AI-generated imagery to consider the ongoing effects of media on young women.
At a moment when women are increasingly losing control over their own bodies, can self-representation become a form of resistance?
An expansive archive illustrates the role of women in shaping over a century of the country’s political and public life.
Qiana Mestrich’s vintage pictures of Black women at work—including her own mother—show the role women of color play in the workplace.
The feminist artist’s early photomontages from the 1960s and ’70s present a world both striking and deeply familiar in its critique of patriarchy and consumerism.
Women have made some of the most radical accomplishments in nonconventional image making. Can working against the grain be an act of defiance?
An exhibition at MoMA shows how women photographers have always demanded a seat at the table.
In the 1970s, Meadow Muska documented the feminist collectives that offered a new definition of home for hundreds of women.
The photobook is a space of creative potential—and a dedicated site of action.
The question of what makes a photobook “feminist” is entangled with all sorts of creative decisions, as well as worldly ones.
Carmen Winant on feminism, photobooks, and the radical gestures of world-building.
The artist discusses feminism, photograms, and what it means to “hover” in the world.
Laia Abril’s new book provides a harrowing record of women’s struggles to access family planning.
Susan Lipper’s sun-bleached pictures reimagine a stereotypically masculine landscape.
At the Museum of Sex, a new look at the prolific—and provocative—Japanese photographer.
In photographs and videos, an artist pushes back against reductive stereotypes of black life.
Aperture presents “Image Worlds to Come: Photography & AI,” a timely and urgent issue that explores how artificial intelligence is quickly transforming the field of photography and our broader culture of images.