Marie Høeg (15 April 1866 – 22 February 1949) was a Norwegian photographer and suffragist.
[1] Høeg's published work was traditional in nature, while her private photography, including images of and created with her partner, Bolette Berg, challenged ideas of gender.
Berg was five years younger than Høeg and had trained as a photographer, probably while living in Finland.
[2] Høeg and Berg moved to Kristiania (present-day Oslo) in 1903 and continued working as professional photographers there, mostly producing scenic and portrait post cards.
[9] A series of negatives in a box labelled "private" contained photographs of Berg and Høeg dressed in men's clothes, smoking, and wearing mustaches.