Categories: Remember When

The Women Who Captured Time

Photography has always been about holding onto a moment before it slips away. Since the very beginning, even as far back as 1826, women have been behind the lens, preserving history, science, and the raw emotion of the human experience. As we look back, we aren’t just seeing pictures; we are seeing the world through their eyes.

Cyanotype of British Algae by Anna Atkins

Anna Atkins

While some debates continue over who took the very first photograph, Anna Atkins holds a distinction that changed how we see the natural world. She was the first to use photography for something truly educational. She didn’t just capture images; she captured science, documenting her botanical findings on breathtaking blue cyanotypes. Her book, Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions, remains a beautiful testament to the intersection of art and study.

Frances Benjamin Johnston self-portrait with cigarette and beer

Frances Benjamin Johnston

Known to her friends simply as Fannie, Frances Benjamin Johnston was a pioneer among American photojournalists. She used her access to document icons like Mark Twain and the Roosevelt family, but her most resonant work might be her own reflection. In her 1896 Self Portrait (as New Woman), she sits with her petticoat showing, a beer in hand, and a cigarette in her fingers. It was shocking for the time, but today, it looks like pure, unapologetic freedom.

Suffragettes marching in London photographed by Christina Broom

Christina Bloom

Christina Bloom turned a family crisis into a legacy. Taking up photography to save her family from financial ruin, she became the UK’s first female press photographer. What started with selling postcards at a local market evolved into documenting soldiers departing for World War I and capturing the intense energy of the Suffragette protests. She didn’t just watch the feminist movement; she preserved it for us.

Migrant Mother by Dorothea Lange

Dorothea Lange

Dorothea Lange famously said that polio “formed me, guided me, instructed me, helped me and humiliated me.” That childhood illness gave her a permanent limp, but it also seemed to give her a unique empathy for the struggle of others. Her lens brought the reality of the Great Depression into American living rooms. Her iconic Migrant Mother, now hanging in the Library of Congress, remains the definitive image of resilience in the face of hardship.

The Fort Peck Dam photographed by Margaret Bourke-White

Margaret Bourke-White

Margaret Bourke-White was a woman defined by “firsts.” She was the first American female war photojournalist and the first Western photographer allowed to document Stalin’s Soviet Union. When LIFE magazine launched its very first issue, it was her work that graced the cover. She went where others couldn’t, or wouldn’t, to make sure the world saw the truth.

Portrait of Berenice Abbott

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Berenice Abbott

After formative years in Paris, Berenice Abbott returned to photograph 1930s New York City in all its stark, black-and-white reality. She captured the oxymorons of the metropolis: extreme wealth beside vast poverty, skyscrapers towering over tight-knit neighborhoods. She lived by a mantra that still rings true for many of us: “The world doesn’t like independent women, why, I don’t know, but I don’t care.”

Self-portrait of Vivian Maier taking a photo in a mirror

Vivian Maier

There is something incredibly poetic about Vivian Maier, the nanny who secretly captured over 150,000 moments of street life. No one knew her name until 2009, when a collector bought her undeveloped film at an auction. It turned out that while she was working her day job, she was quietly mastering the art of street photography, finding the extraordinary in the ordinary moments that most people walked right past.

Identical twins photographed by Diane Arbus

Diane Arbus

At a time when American culture was obsessed with being clean-cut and perfect, Diane Arbus looked elsewhere. She championed the “weird,” training her lens on nudists, circus performers, and marginalized communities. She refused to look away from imperfection, forcing society to acknowledge the obscure and the different.

Untitled Film Still by Cindy Sherman

Cindy Sherman

In the late 1970s, Cindy Sherman changed the conversation with her Untitled Film Stills. These weren’t just portraits; they were performances. acting as the “damsel in distress” in noir-style scenes, she didn’t reference specific movies but rather the feeling of them. It was a brilliant critique of female stereotypes, using familiarity to expose the roles women are often forced to play.

The Kitchen Table Series by Carrie Mae Weems

Carrie Mae Weems

Carrie Mae Weems brought photography into the most intimate of spaces: the home. Her work focuses deeply on family, particularly Black families. In her famous The Kitchen Table Series, she placed herself in the frame to explore the role of the “traditional woman,” challenging the single narratives that so often confine women’s lives.

Annie Leibovitz

You have likely grown up seeing Annie Leibovitz’s work without even realizing it. From Rolling Stone to Vanity Fair, she defined the celebrity portrait, capturing everyone from Queen Elizabeth II to Demi Moore. But perhaps her most haunting contribution to history is the photo of John Lennon taken on December 8, 1980-just five hours before he died. It was the last time the world saw him through a professional lens.

Carol Guzy holding a camera

Carol Guzy

Carol Guzy brings a unique compassion to photojournalism, perhaps stemming from her original career path in nursing. As the only journalist to win the Pulitzer Prize four times, she has documented heartbreak from Hurricane Katrina to the earthquake in Haiti. Her photos aren’t just news; they are intimate portraits of humanity in crisis, treating every subject with the dignity they deserve.

Mira Lorne

**Feature Essayist • Human Experience Observer • Story Collector** Mira Lorne writes with the immersive depth of a magazine feature writer. Her essays read like portraits — capturing the texture of real moments, the emotional shifts that happen quietly, and the intimate details that turn memories into stories. On LasenSpace, Mira shares: - richly detailed narratives about personal turning points - reflections on relationships, loss, celebration, and change - memory-driven pieces anchored in vivid scenes and character moments - thoughtful explorations of why certain memories stay with us Mira believes stories don’t just preserve memory — they help us understand the people we’ve been and the people we’re becoming.

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