Hanna (Anna) Maria Sahlström (1876–1956) was a Swedish painter and graphic artist.
Emulating Paul Gauguin and Wassily Kandinsky, she adopted an abstract, stylized approach.
She was one of several women studying at the school at the time, such as Elsa Giöbel-Oyler and Eva Jancke-Björk.
Her teacher Karl Nordström encouraged her to develop her engraving skills in order to create woodcuts.
While her paintings were mainly portraits, her woodcuts depicted landscape scenes including Myr (1910), Skära hafre (1912), Fårklippning (1915) and Regnet hotar (1930).