Rewriting Women into Maritime History and the SHE_SEES exhibition are looking to expand their impact internationally, by telling the stories of women working in the maritime sector around the world.
As explained, these stories will be captured over the next three years, starting in 2025 with Greece, the Netherlands and India. The contemporary component of SHE_SEES is led by portrait photographer Emilie Sandy who is encouraging more women to get involved and share their own stories via the participatory photography element, SHE_ SEES HER VOICE.
This will enable a broader range of women in the sector to connect and be represented, working with a photographer to empower them to share their own stories, and to shape and control their own narrative.
SHE_ SEES HER VOICE is currently seeking eight female harbour pilots from around the world to share their stories. For more information and to get involved, visit the Lloyd’s Register Foundation Heritage Centre website, or contact [email protected].
We are delighted by the momentum that the Rewriting Women into Maritime History initiative and SHE_SEES have gathered to date – bringing to light forgotten stories from the past, showcasing the female maritime leaders of the present, and inspiring the next generation to consider a career in the sector
… said Louise Sanger, Head of Research, Interpretation and Engagement at the Lloyd’s Register Foundation Heritage Centre.
What is the SHE_SEES exhibition?
Launched in the UK and Ireland in 2023, the programme uses archival material held by maritime organisations, as well as oral histories to piece together their stories, showcasing them publicly through the SHE_SEES exhibition. Using a mix of striking visuals, art and storytelling, SHE_SEES debuted at the home of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) during London International Shipping Week 2023, and is currently on tour, with a residency at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard until August 2025. By highlighting the expertise, experience and leadership of women, the programme helps reframe the narrative of a predominantly masculine industry and encourages more people to take up the opportunities offered by a career in the maritime sector today.
Women have been contributing to maritime life for centuries. Seagoing doctors and pirates, laundresses and captain’s deputies, navigation teachers and cartographers. They’ve been overlooked. But from the 1970s, they really took off. And they’re making progress fast. This project encouragingly connects past, present and future
… added Dr Jo Stanley, a maritime historian specialising in gender and diversity.
As well as launching the international phase of the Rewriting Women into Maritime History programme, Lloyd’s Register Foundation also marked 11 February – the International Day of Women and Girls in Science – with the release of a new film produced in collaboration with Historic England uncovering the history of women in shipbuilding in the UK.