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20th-century Australian photographers

This list has 59 members. See also 20th-century Australian artists, 20th-century photographers by nationality, Australian photographers by century
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  • Helmut Newton
    Helmut Newton Australian photographer (1920–2004)
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    rank #1 · WDW 68 1 5
    Helmut Newton (born Helmut Neustädter; 31 October 1920 – 23 January 2004) was a German-Australian photographer. He was a "prolific, widely imitated fashion photographer whose provocative, erotically charged black-and-white photos were a mainstay of Vogue and other publications."
  • Frank Hurley
    Frank Hurley Australian photographer and adventurer.
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    rank #2 ·
    James Francis "Frank" Hurley OBE (15 October 1885 – 16 January 1962) was an Australian photographer and adventurer. He participated in a number of expeditions to Antarctica and served as an official photographer with Australian forces during both world wars.
  • Anne Zahalka Australian photographer
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    rank #3 ·
    Anne Zahalka (born 1957) is an Australian photo media artist (photographer). She was born to a Jewish Austrian mother and Catholic Czech father. Her parents met and married in England during the Second World War. Zahalka subsequently developed an interest in Australia's migrants and diverse cultures.
  • Olive Cotton
    Olive Cotton Australian photographer
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    rank #4 ·
    Olive Cotton (11 July 1911 – 27 September 2003) was a pioneering Australian modernist female photographer of the 1930s and 1940s working in Sydney. Cotton became a national "name" with a retrospective and touring exhibition 50 years later in 1985. A book of her life and work, published by the National Library of Australia, came out in 1995. Cotton captured her childhood friend Max Dupain from the sidelines at photoshoots, e.g. "Fashion shot, Cronulla Sandhills, circa 1937" and made several portraits of him. Dupain was Cotton's first husband.
  • Wolfgang Sievers
    Wolfgang Sievers Australian photographer
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    rank #5 ·
    Wolfgang Georg Sievers, AO (18 September 1913 – 7 August 2007) was an Australian photographer who specialised in architectural and industrial photography.
  • May and Mina Moore
    May and Mina Moore New Zealand sisters and photographers
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    rank #6 ·
    May and Mina Moore were New Zealand-born photographers who made careers as professional photographers, first in Wellington, New Zealand, and later in Sydney and Melbourne, Australia. They are known for their Rembrandt-style portrait photography, and their subjects included famous artists, musicians, and writers of the era.
  • Jon Rhodes Australian photographer (born 1947)
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    rank #7 ·
    Jon Rhodes is an Australian photographer who has been described as a "pioneer" in "the development of a collaborative methodology between high art photography and [Australian] Aboriginal People living in remote communities". Rhodes' work is represented in all major Australian collections and at the J Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles.
  • Doug Spowart Australian photographer
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    rank #8 ·
    Doug Spowart (born 1953) is a Queensland photographer who has a Master of Photography and is an Honorary Fellow of the Australian Institute of Professional Photography (AIPP). His work has been exhibited in Australia and internationally. He is the author of numerous photography books and artist books. His artist books are held in gallery collections throughout Australia.
  • John Raymond Garrett British photojournalist
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    rank #9 ·
    John Raymond Garrett (born 12 November 1940) is an Australian/British photo journalist whose work is mainly on fashion, reportage and photojournalism. He has covered situations and exhibited widely and is the author of many books.
  • Carol Jerrems
    Carol Jerrems Australian photographer
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    rank #10 ·
    Carol Jerrems (14 March 1949 – 21 February 1980) was an Australian photographer/filmmaker whose work emerged just as her medium was beginning to regain the acceptance as an art form that it had in the Pictorial era, and in which she newly synthesizes complicity performed, documentary and autobiographical image-making of the human subject, as exemplified in her Vale Street.
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