Anna Fox (born 1961) is a British documentary photographer, known for a "combative, highly charged use of flash and colour".
Fox completed her degree in Photography at West Surrey College of Art and Design in Farnham, Surrey in 1986[3] under tutors Martin Parr, Paul Graham and Karen Knorr.
[3] In 2019, Fox was awarded an Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society.
The critic Sean O'Hagan, reviewing Resort 1 - Butlin's Bognor Regis in The Guardian, said "Her work often hones in on the particular to suggest the universal, such as her series The Village (1991–1993), in which rural England becomes a pastiche of itself even as the individual lives glimpsed therein seem vividly real.
"[6] David Chandler, in his essay Vile Bodies, in the book Anna Fox Photographs 1983-2007, said Fox is "widely regarded as an important part of what might be called the 'second wave' of British colour documentary photography" and that she "helped form its particular style of combative, highly charged use of flash and colour".