Photography Contest

Women by Women: A Global Open Call by PhotoVogue

Deadline |
CLOSEDTheme |
WomenTerritory |
WorldwideEligibility |
18+Entry Fees |
FREEPrizes |
ExhibitionHost |
Vogue MagazineThis year’s PhotoVogue Global Open Call celebrates the limitless ways women see and are seen—embracing photography and film as powerful tools to reclaim, redefine, and expand visual storytelling.
The Urgency of Representation
The illusion of linear progress—the belief that rights, visibility, and recognition are irrevocable—has been shattered by the current political climate.
Across the globe, we are witnessing increasing pushback against women's autonomy, from reproductive rights to freedom of expression, reminding us that what once seemed secure can also be taken away.
As these rights are contested, it becomes more urgent than ever to not only consider how women see but how they continue to carve out spaces for their perspectives.
In a world where their ability to shape narratives and define vision remains a battleground, representation is both an act of resistance and a tool for change.
For generations, women have fought not only to reclaim how they are seen but to assert their right to see on their own terms.
Photography and video have long been arenas where vision is not just about aesthetics but about power.
This year’s PhotoVogue Global Open Call is dedicated to Women by Women—a celebration of the myriad ways women represent themselves and one another through photography and video.
From The Female Gaze to Women’s Vision
This is not a new conversation.
In 2016, the PhotoVogue Festival explored The Female Gaze, featuring artists such as Cindy Sherman, Petra Collins, Aida Muluneh, Nan Goldin, and Zanele Muholi.
At the time, it felt urgent and revolutionary—a necessary counterpoint to the Male Gaze theorized by Laura Mulvey. A new generation of female photographers and filmmakers was reclaiming their right to look and be looked at on their own terms.
Nearly a decade later, we ask: Does The Female Gaze still capture the evolving complexity of how women see today?
While female-led perspectives in photography, film, and video have expanded, systemic barriers persist.
Women continue to face disparities in visibility, opportunity, and financial stability.
Meanwhile, digital platforms—while offering new avenues for representation—have also intensified scrutiny, commodified feminist narratives, and constrained women’s freedom of expression.
Perhaps The Female Gaze, as a direct response to The Male Gaze, is no longer sufficient—it remains tied to a binary opposition.
Instead, contemporary feminist and critical theories have expanded our understanding of vision and representation, moving beyond rigid categories to embrace fluidity, intersectionality, and self-definition.
Thinkers shaping this evolution include:
bell hooks – Explores how race, class, and resistance shape women's ways of seeing.
Judith Butler – Argues that gender is fluid, performed, and constantly evolving.
Rosi Braidotti – Links identity to technology, environment, and shifting social structures.
Audre Lorde – Reframes difference as a source of power rather than division.
Sylvia Wynter – Questions colonial and racial hierarchies that shape dominant visual paradigms.
Donna Haraway – Challenges essentialism, advocating for hybridity and interconnectedness.
By drawing from these perspectives, we move beyond binary frameworks and acknowledge that women's ways of seeing are dynamic—shaped by lived experiences, histories, and the socio-political forces that both restrict and redefine them.
Why Women by Women?
This open call does not seek to define a singular “woman’s gaze” but rather to embrace the limitless ways in which women see, interpret, and reconstruct vision.
It is not about opposing dominant visual paradigms but about affirming women's perspectives as diverse, fluid, and self-determined.
We welcome submissions from all women and those who identify with womanhood—across race, gender identity, sexuality, ability, and socio-political backgrounds.
Identity is not only shaped by who holds the camera but also by the act of being seen.
As Susan Sontag reminds us in On Photography, photography does not merely reflect reality—it constructs it.
At a time when women’s identities are under attack, when their rights and very existence are being erased, photographing women is an act of affirmation.
It is a declaration that they exist, that they see, and that they are seen—on their own terms.
Women by Women: Reclaiming the Narrative
In 2016, The Female Gaze was a crucial intervention in a world where women’s perspectives had long been overlooked.
It was an essential step in reclaiming space in visual culture.
Nearly a decade later, the conversation must evolve.
This open call moves beyond a binary response to The Male Gaze, embracing a more fluid, intersectional approach that reflects the complexities of identity, power, and representation today.
In 2025, Women by Women affirms that women’s vision is not merely a reaction to The Male Gaze—it is a powerful force in its own right, free to shape its own narrative.
If the camera is power, then let’s wield it—in our own voices, in our own thousand ways.
How to Submit
Who We’re Looking For
We seek women photographers and video makers worldwide whose work offers fresh and compelling perspectives across all genres—from fashion to documentary, portraiture, fine art, and beyond.
Grants & Opportunities
We are awarding a total of $12,000 in grants to three artists whose work challenges conventions and expands creative possibilities:
$6,000 – Outstanding Vision Grant For an artist pushing creative boundaries.
$4,000 – Vision Grant For an artist with a compelling and unique perspective.
$2,000 – Rising Voice Grant For an emerging artist showing originality and promise.
Recognition & Exposure
Selected artists will:
Be showcased at the next edition of the PhotoVogue Festival
Have the opportunity to be published in Vogue editions worldwide
Be selected to participate in the next PhotoVogue Virtual Portfolio Reviews
Image: Ramona Wang
The Urgency of Representation
The illusion of linear progress—the belief that rights, visibility, and recognition are irrevocable—has been shattered by the current political climate.
Across the globe, we are witnessing increasing pushback against women's autonomy, from reproductive rights to freedom of expression, reminding us that what once seemed secure can also be taken away.
As these rights are contested, it becomes more urgent than ever to not only consider how women see but how they continue to carve out spaces for their perspectives.
In a world where their ability to shape narratives and define vision remains a battleground, representation is both an act of resistance and a tool for change.
For generations, women have fought not only to reclaim how they are seen but to assert their right to see on their own terms.
Photography and video have long been arenas where vision is not just about aesthetics but about power.
This year’s PhotoVogue Global Open Call is dedicated to Women by Women—a celebration of the myriad ways women represent themselves and one another through photography and video.
From The Female Gaze to Women’s Vision
This is not a new conversation.
In 2016, the PhotoVogue Festival explored The Female Gaze, featuring artists such as Cindy Sherman, Petra Collins, Aida Muluneh, Nan Goldin, and Zanele Muholi.
At the time, it felt urgent and revolutionary—a necessary counterpoint to the Male Gaze theorized by Laura Mulvey. A new generation of female photographers and filmmakers was reclaiming their right to look and be looked at on their own terms.
Nearly a decade later, we ask: Does The Female Gaze still capture the evolving complexity of how women see today?
While female-led perspectives in photography, film, and video have expanded, systemic barriers persist.
Women continue to face disparities in visibility, opportunity, and financial stability.
Meanwhile, digital platforms—while offering new avenues for representation—have also intensified scrutiny, commodified feminist narratives, and constrained women’s freedom of expression.
Perhaps The Female Gaze, as a direct response to The Male Gaze, is no longer sufficient—it remains tied to a binary opposition.
Instead, contemporary feminist and critical theories have expanded our understanding of vision and representation, moving beyond rigid categories to embrace fluidity, intersectionality, and self-definition.
Thinkers shaping this evolution include:
bell hooks – Explores how race, class, and resistance shape women's ways of seeing.
Judith Butler – Argues that gender is fluid, performed, and constantly evolving.
Rosi Braidotti – Links identity to technology, environment, and shifting social structures.
Audre Lorde – Reframes difference as a source of power rather than division.
Sylvia Wynter – Questions colonial and racial hierarchies that shape dominant visual paradigms.
Donna Haraway – Challenges essentialism, advocating for hybridity and interconnectedness.
By drawing from these perspectives, we move beyond binary frameworks and acknowledge that women's ways of seeing are dynamic—shaped by lived experiences, histories, and the socio-political forces that both restrict and redefine them.
Why Women by Women?
This open call does not seek to define a singular “woman’s gaze” but rather to embrace the limitless ways in which women see, interpret, and reconstruct vision.
It is not about opposing dominant visual paradigms but about affirming women's perspectives as diverse, fluid, and self-determined.
We welcome submissions from all women and those who identify with womanhood—across race, gender identity, sexuality, ability, and socio-political backgrounds.
Identity is not only shaped by who holds the camera but also by the act of being seen.
As Susan Sontag reminds us in On Photography, photography does not merely reflect reality—it constructs it.
At a time when women’s identities are under attack, when their rights and very existence are being erased, photographing women is an act of affirmation.
It is a declaration that they exist, that they see, and that they are seen—on their own terms.
Women by Women: Reclaiming the Narrative
In 2016, The Female Gaze was a crucial intervention in a world where women’s perspectives had long been overlooked.
It was an essential step in reclaiming space in visual culture.
Nearly a decade later, the conversation must evolve.
This open call moves beyond a binary response to The Male Gaze, embracing a more fluid, intersectional approach that reflects the complexities of identity, power, and representation today.
In 2025, Women by Women affirms that women’s vision is not merely a reaction to The Male Gaze—it is a powerful force in its own right, free to shape its own narrative.
If the camera is power, then let’s wield it—in our own voices, in our own thousand ways.
How to Submit
Who We’re Looking For
We seek women photographers and video makers worldwide whose work offers fresh and compelling perspectives across all genres—from fashion to documentary, portraiture, fine art, and beyond.
Grants & Opportunities
We are awarding a total of $12,000 in grants to three artists whose work challenges conventions and expands creative possibilities:
$6,000 – Outstanding Vision Grant For an artist pushing creative boundaries.
$4,000 – Vision Grant For an artist with a compelling and unique perspective.
$2,000 – Rising Voice Grant For an emerging artist showing originality and promise.
Recognition & Exposure
Selected artists will:
Be showcased at the next edition of the PhotoVogue Festival
Have the opportunity to be published in Vogue editions worldwide
Be selected to participate in the next PhotoVogue Virtual Portfolio Reviews
Image: Ramona Wang
Featured Photo Contest
AAP Magazine #52 / STREET
The 52nd printed issue of AAP Magazine will feature the best projects showcasing urban life. Send a cohesive body of work or portfolio - capturing the weird and wonderful moments unfolding around you!
© Tommi Viitala
Best Photography Contests in 2023
Each year, there are hundreds of photography competitions all over the world, so we've decided to select for you the best of the best! Our selection of the best photo contests in 2023 is thoroughly curated to help you, whether you are a professional photographer or an amateur, to help find your next creative breakthrough. These all-star competitions offer the greatest opportunities for international exposure and/or incredible financial benefits. Some of them are closing soon, so get your photo submissions in!
ENDS 09/15/25
Winners and finalists will be part of a group exhibition at Las Fotos Project in Los Angeles this October.
ENDS 09/16/25
We are excited to offer one (1) $20,000 grant and six (6) $5,000 grants to help bring these vital stories to life.
ENDS 09/22/25
A $20,000 prize awarded annually to a photographer whose work demonstrates a compelling new vision in photographic portraiture.
ENDS 09/23/25
Be Featured in our September 2025 Online Juried Solo Exhibition! Juror: Aline Smithson, Photographer, Founder of Lenscratch & Curator
ENDS 09/30/25
If you're a passionate amateur or professional photographer, we invite you to share your photographic project with us.
ENDS 09/30/25
Send us a cohesive body of work or portfolio - capturing the weird and wonderful moments unfolding around you! The subject is completely up to you.
ENDS 10/01/25
TIFA connects photographers from around the world with the creative community in Tokyo, Japan, providing them with an excellent platform to present their work to a new market.
ENDS 10/01/25
The Center for Photographic Art (CPA) is excited to announce the 2025 International Juried Exhibition with $5,000 in awards!
ENDS 10/06/25
For 2025, the amount of the W. Eugene Smith Grant is $30,000 and two additional $10,000 Finalist Grants will be awarded.
ENDS 10/06/25
For 2025, the amount of the W. Eugene Smith Student Grant is $5,000. The grant provides two students with the opportunity to complete a photographic essay.
ENDS 10/07/25
Now in its 12th year, the International Landscape Photographer of the Year Awards is allowing all landscape photographers to share a total of 12,500 USD in cash prizes.
ENDS 10/31/25
Selected by a jury composed of five professionals from the fields of photography and publishing, the winner of the Henri Cartier-Bresson Self-Published PhotoBook Award will receive a prize of €8,000.
ENDS 11/02/25
The best photographs will be presented in an exhibition in the Principality of Monaco, then touring in various locations around the world, as well as in a high-quality photography book.
ENDS 01/06/26
First place receives Sony Digital Imaging equipment and inclusion in the Sony World Photography Awards exhibition and book
ENDS 01/06/26
Dedicated to young photographers under 19 years-old - first prize is top Sony digital imaging equipment plus benefit from global exposure
ENDS 01/06/26
Rewarding the best single images! Enter for free and you could win $5,000, top Sony digital imaging equipment plus more!
ENDS 01/13/26
Rewarding the best photo series worldwide! Enter for free and you could win $25,000, a range of Sony digital imaging equipment plus more!
ENDS 02/15/26
Art is born out of passion. Fine Art photography is a perfect instrument, which allows a person to communicate with the world and share their vision. It results from the author's deep sensitivity, a need to express feelings through image.
ENDS 05/17/26
MonoVisions Photography Awards are an international open call for photographers using black and white medium to express their visual language.