Susan
Meiselas (born 1948) is an American documentary photographer. She has
been associated with Magnum Photos since 1976 and a full member since
1980. Her works have been published in newspapers and magazines
including The New York Times, The Times, Time, GEO and Paris Match.
She received the Robert Capa Gold Medal in 1979 and was named a
MacArthur Fellow in 1992.
“The
camera is an excuse to be someplace you otherwise don't belong. It
gives me both a point of connection and a point of separation.
”Susan
Meiselas
Susan
Meiselas received her B.A. from Sarah Lawrence College and her M.A.
in visual education from Harvard University. Her first major
photographic essay focused on the lives of women doing striptease at
New England country fairs. She photographed the carnivals during
three consecutive summers while teaching photography in the New York
public schools. CARNIVAL STRIPPERS was published by Farrar, Straus &
Giroux in 1976. A selection was installed at the Whitney Museum of
Art in June 2000. The original book was revised and reprinted by the
Whitney Museum and Steidl Verlag in 2003.
Meiselas
joined Magnum Photos in 1976 and has worked as a freelance
photographer since then. She is best known for her coverage of the
insurrection in Nicaragua and her documentation of human rights
issues in Latin America, which were published widely throughout the
world. In 1981, Pantheon published her second monograph, NICARAGUA,
JUNE 1978-JULY 1979 which was reprinted by Aperture, fall 2008.
Meiselas
served as an editor and contributor to the book EL SALVADOR: THE WORK
OF THIRTY PHOTOGRAPHERS (Writers & Readers, 1983) and edited
CHILE FROM WITHIN (W.W. Norton, 1991) featuring work by photographers
living under the Pinochet regime. She has co-directed two films:
“Living at Risk: The Story of a Nicaraguan Family” (1986) and
"Pictures from a Revolution" (1991) with Richard P. Rogers
and Alfred Guzzetti. In 1997, she completed a six year project
curating a 100 year photographic history of Kurdistan, and
integrating her own work into the book entitled KURDISTAN: IN THE
SHADOW OF HISTORY (Random House, 1997; reprinted by the University of
Chicago Press, 2008). Meiselas then created the website,
www.akaKURDISTAN.com, an online archive of collective memory; as well
as an exhibition that launched at the Menil Collection in Houston,
and traveled for eight years to several venues in the United States
and Europe.
Her
2001 monograph, PANDORA'S BOX (Magnum Editions/Trebruk) which
explores a New York S & M club, has been exhibited both at home
and abroad. In 2003, ENCOUNTERS WITH THE DANI was featured as an
installation in the International Center of Photography's Triennial
"Strangers" and co-published by ICP/Steidl Verlag. The book
explores a 60 year history of outsiders’ discovery and interactions
with the Dani, an indigenous people of the highlands of Papua in
Indonesia.
Meiselas
has had one-woman exhibitions in Paris, Madrid, Amsterdam, London,
Los Angeles, Chicago and New York. Her work is included in American
and international collections. Honorary awards of recognition
include: the Robert Capa Gold Medal for “outstanding courage and
reporting” by the Overseas Press Club for her work in Nicaragua
(1979); the Leica Award for Excellence (1982); the Engelhard Award
from the Institute of Contemporary Art (1985); the Maria Moors Cabot
Prize from Columbia University for her coverage of Latin America
(1994); the Hasselblad Foundation Photography prize (1994) and most
recently, the Cornell Capa Infinity Award (2005). In 1992, she was
named a MacArthur Fellow.






























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