Paola Gianturco is an American photojournalist and former business executive. Her photojournalistic work has focused on women around the world who have overcome difficult issues.
Before becoming a photojournalist in the mid-1990s, Gianturco spent 34 years working in marketing and corporate communications. She worked at Hall & Levine, the first women-owned advertising agency, where she became a principal; and spent nine years as executive vice president of the corporate communications subsidiary of Saatchi & Saatchi.
Photojournalism
Entry into photojournalism
In 1995, Gianturco was living near San Francisco, working as a communications consultant. The United Nations’ Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing inspired her to document craftswomen in developing countries, and she invited former co-worker Toby Tuttle to collaborate in photographing and writing a book. At the time, the two were both amateur photographers and longtime folk art collectors. They spent three years researching the subject, and two more interviewing and photographing 90 craftswomen in 12 developing countries on 4 continents. They spent at least a week in each of the 28 villages they visited. In Her Hands: Craftswomen Changing the World was published in 2000, with a foreword by Alice Walker. The book includes 260 color photographs. Gianturco and Tuttle wrote the book with the intention of bringing publicity to the craftswomen, and to help the craftswomen receive a fair share of the proceeds from sales of their work.
Other projects
With her next book, 2004’s Celebrating Women, Gianturco documented festivals and ceremonies in 15 countries across the globe that honor women. ¡Viva Colores! A Salute to the Indomitable People of Guatemala, with text by David Hill and photos by Gianturco, taken over a ten-year span, is a collection of vivid, colorful photos of seemingly ordinary Guatemalans who are making a difference in their communities. Her 2007 book Women Who Light the Dark spotlights women who have overcome issues such as poverty, disease and violence to improve themselves and their communities. Gianturco interviewed and photographed women in 15 countries on 5 continents. Grandmother Power: A Global Phenomenon was published in 2012. Gianturco, a grandmother herself, profiles activist grandmothers from 15 countries across 5 continents, with the women telling their stories in their own words, accompanied by Gianturco’s photos. She began researching the book in 2006 while in Kenya working on Women Who Light the Dark, where she observed a “new international activist grandmother movement.” Wonder Girls: Changing Our World, written with her granddaughter Alex Sangster, documents the work of groups of activist girls in thirteen different countries. Musimbi Kanyoro, the president and CEO of the Global Fund for Women, wrote the forward for the book. The book received a Nautilus Book Grand/Gold Award in the Social Change/Social Justice category in 2017.