
Originally Posted by
Max von MeiselMaus
And an interesting and relevant snippet from another reputable source (Fortune, from this March).
Dorothea Lange, Annie Leibovitz, and Cindy Sherman are household names to the art-friendly. But while women have trained as great photographers since the turn of the 20th century, photography has been a predominately male profession. In 1983, only 20% of photographers were women. Today, the gender balance in the job is about 50/50, according to a 2012 Bureau of Labor Statistics report. That 50/50 split does not extend to pay, though. According to a report released in 2008 by the National Endowment for the Arts, the median income for male photographers, as of 2005, was $35,000. The median income for female photographers was less than half as much, $16,300.
Now that is pause for thought. The proportion of women working as a photographer has increased wildly in the last thirty years, yet the pay gap is HUGE! That is on one side heartening, and on the other depressing.
The same source that supplied that article also stated that 60% of photographers under 35 are women. This means that, in decades to come, it is likely that female professional photographers will outnumber male.
I am not sure I can find info on the UK, but will look.