Margaret’s work is defined by its painter sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

Magic Carpet, from Screen Prints 1970
Margaret McKenna conceived, organized, and produced by Sonia Sheridan produced by The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and the Advance Screen Company, Chicago distributed by The Goodlion

Birthday Party
Margaret Burroughs American, 1915-2010

Julia Jackson
Julia Margaret Cameron English, 1815–1879

A Mile Underground, Kimberly Diamond Mine, South Africa
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Anne Thackeray Ritchie
Julia Margaret Cameron English, 1815–1879

World's Highest Standard of Living
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Family
Margaret Burroughs American, 1915-2010

Buchenwald Camp Victims
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Mahatma Gandhi Spinning
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Margaret Frances Langton Clarke
Lewis Carroll (Reverend Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) English, 1832–1898

Portrait of Bill Brandt
Rollie McKenna American, 1918-2003

A Study of the Beatrice Cenci
Julia Margaret Cameron English, 1815–1879

42,000 feet over Kansas
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Eleanor Margaret Gibson-Carmichael
Henry Raeburn (Scottish, 1756–1823)

Fort Peck Dam, Montana
Margaret Bourke–White American, 1904–1971

Vultures of Calcutta, India
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971

Mrs. Herbert Duckworth
Julia Margaret Cameron English, 1815–1879

Frame-Theory, the Artificial Blossom, or the Blind Man's Bluff
Margaret Wharton American, 1943-2014

Statue of Liberty
Margaret Bourke-White American, 1904–1971