Maggie Hallahan
Quick Facts
Biography
Maggie Hallahan is an editorial and advertising photographer and entrepreneur based in San Francisco, California. Her work has been published internationally in newspapers, magazines and photography books. In 2004, she founded the multimedia production company MHVP and serves as CEO and director of the company. Her exhibition State of Emergency: Disaster Response in California was featured at the Oakland Museum of California in 2002.
Throughout her career, Hallahan has worked with several philanthropic organizations such as United States Agency for International Development, the Roll Back Malaria Partnership, and the United Nations Foundation.
Early life and career
Hallahan became interested in photography in 1969, at the age of eight, after her parents took her to see The Family of Man photography exhibit. After moving with her mother to Los Angeles, she attended Reseda High School where she continued to focus on photography before traveling to Europe. Hallahan began working as an advertising and editorial photographer and had her work featured in The New York Times, Newsweek, Time, the Los Angeles Times, MSNBC, and on Martha Stewart's website. Hallahan worked with the German magazine Focus (German magazine) from 1995 until 1997. She is credited with shooting the "Malibu Fire" photo featured in the Celebrity Skin album released by the band Hole in 1998.
Hallahan was involved in the United Nations Communication Strategies and Project at the UNFPA (1980-1995)
• 1980 in Cambodian refugee camp work Khao-I-Dang Thailand.
• United Nations International Conference on Population and Development with Tipper Gore UN, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, Dr. Nafis Sadik (1994)
Hallahan photographed Hillary Clinton's now famous speech at the Beijing Women's Conference in 1995
In 2002, Hallahan's 45 photograph solo exhibit, State of Emergency: Disaster Response in California was featured at the Oakland Museum of California. Hallahan was selected as a photographer in the Rick Smolan produced event America At Home, in which photographers were asked to document home life in 2007. In July 2007, Hallahans photographs from a trip to Iceland were featured in the book Photoshop Lightroom Adventure by Mikkel Aaland. In 2008, Hallahan's photographic collection on Malaria was included in a book titled, What Matters, by David Elliot Cohen, the book includes works from various authors and photographers as they highlight what they believe are significant issues affecting the world. Hallahan worked with the UN Foundation and Roll Back Malaria Partnership to illustrate families and communities directly impacted by Malaria for a exhibition titled, "Champions to End Malaria" in 2011. In 2013, Hallahan worked with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) on the Malaria initiative.