Skip to main content

2025 Outstanding Contribution to Photography: Susan Meiselas

1 week ago

Roseann on the way to Manhattan Beach, New York City, 1978 © Susan Meiselas / Magnum Photos

We’re thrilled to announce Susan Meiselas as the recipient of the Outstanding Contribution to Photography of the Sony World Photography Awards 2025.

The prestigious award celebrates the lifetime achievements of the people behind some of the most groundbreaking photographic work of our time, and in the case of Susan Meiselas honours her significant impact on the medium over the past five decades.

Commenting on her acceptance of the award, Susan Meiselas says:

’I am honoured to receive this Award for my contribution to the ever-expanding world of photography. Over the past 50 years, I have had the privilege of witnessing history being made, sharing the often unseen lives of those engaged in its making. The work on display invites reflection not only on the photographs themselves but also on the relationships that shaped and inspired them.’

As its 18th recipient, Susan Meiselas joins a distinguished list of names including Mary Ellen Mark (2014), Martin Parr (2017), Graciela Iturbide (2021), Edward Burtynsky (2022) and Sebastião Salgado (2024).


Susan Meiselas’s life and work

Self-portrait, 44 Irving Street, Cambridge MA, 1971 © Susan Meiselas / Magnum Photos

Born in Baltimore, USA, in 1948, Susan Meiselas completed her MA in visual education at Harvard University before working as a teacher. She began photographing during school summer breaks, creating her first project Carnival Strippers in the summers of 1972-75. She joined Magnum Photos in 1976 and has gone on to produce several significant bodies of work.

Celebrated for her deeply engaged approach, Meiselas has created a powerful corpus of work, expanding perceptions of documentary photography through her insightful portrayals of people in their communities.

Meiselas is well known for depicting the stories of women: from girls growing up in Little Italy, New York; to strippers performing in state fairs; to women escaping domestic violence in the UK, and for her work documenting human rights issues in Latin America, as well as compiling a photographic history of Kurdistan. Her photographic essays, rooted in place, share the lives and experiences of those in front of her lens. Taken over extended periods—often accompanied by field notes and participant testimonies—Meiselas’s projects invite collaboration.


Exhibition

From 17 April until 5 May 2025, visitors to the Sony World Photography Awards exhibition will have the chance to explore excerpts of five projects by Meiselas at London’s Somerset House, including ones never exhibited before in the UK.

Dee and Lisa on Mott Street, Little Italy, New York City, 1976 © Susan Meiselas / Magnum Photos

The series presented at Somerset House chronicle the interpersonal relationships and her exchanges over time:

44 Irving Street (1971)
Meiselas invited neighbours in her boarding house to write about the differences they found between how they saw themselves and what was revealed in the portraits that she made of them.

Prince Street Girls, (1975 - 1990)
Dynamics of a group of young girls growing up in Little Italy, tracing their evolution to adulthood.

Carnival Strippers (1972-75)
The onstage and offstage experiences of women doing striptease at small-town carnivals across New England, capturing both their performative and private lives, counter-balanced with a collage of voices of all the participants, from the girl show manager to the women on stage and the men in the audience. 

Pandora’s Box (1995)
An immersive projection focusing on a New York City S&M club known as ‘a Disneyland of Domination.’ 

In A Room of Their Own (2015-2017)
Meiselas turns her lens towards a women’s refuge in the Black Country, UK. She combines photographs of resident’s rooms with testimonies and original artworks generated by survivors that both express and protect their identities.

The Star, Tunbridge, Vermont, 1975 © Susan Meiselas / Magnum Photos

If you would like the chance to exhibit your photographs at the London exhibition, enter the Sony World Photography Awards 2025 for free today.