Michelle Agins
Michelle V. Agins joined The New York Times as a photographer in June 1989. Prior to that, she had been a staff photographer for The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer since December 1987.
Ms. Agins began her career in photography as an intern for The Chicago Daily News and in less than a year became a sports photographer.
In 1975 and part of 1976, she became affiliated with Project Upward Bound and taught photography first at Loyola University and later, at the University of Illinois at Chicago. From 1976 to 1977, she briefly worked as photojournalist for the South Shore Sentinel Newspaper in Chicago.
In 1977, Ms. Agins became a photographer and audio-visual specialist for the City of Chicago’s Department of Human Services. Then from 1983 to 1987 she became Chicago Mayor Harold Washington’s official photographer before joining the Charlotte Observer.
Ms. Agins’ photographs have been widely exhibited. In 1981, in Chicago, she received the Mayor’s Award for Photographic Excellence and staged a one-woman show entitled “I Saw You.” She exhibited in a show called “Faces” at the 1987 National Black Journalists Conference in Miami, and in 1990 she was awarded citations by the New York Association of Black Journalists and the New York Associated Press.
Ms. Agins is a graduate of Rosary College of Dominican University, and Chicago’s DuSable High School. Co-author of two books, Sisterfriends (Pocketbook/Simon Shuster) and The Rockie (Dutton/Penguin Books), Ms. Agins has received two Pulitzer Prize nominations, first in 1990 for her coverage of the aftermath of a racially motivated killing in Bensonhust, Brooklyn, and then again in 1995 for her work on the Times series “Another America: Life on 129th Street.” In 2001 Ms. Agins and her colleagues won a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for their series “How Race is Lived in America.” In 2017, Ms. Agins became a faculty member at the Eddie Adams Workshop.