Sigríður Zoëga (April 14, 1889 – September 24, 1968) was an Icelandic photographer.
She and her sister Guðrún trained under photographer Pétur Brynjólfsson.
[1] After three years with Sander, Zoëga retumed to Iceland in April 1914 to open a photography studio in Reykjavík with financial help from her family.
Zoëga & Co.[1] Zoëga's photographic work was primarily portraiture, and her style was a relaxed and natural one favored by the rising bourgeois class in a growing Reykjavík, in contrast to stiff carte-de-visite-style portraits of previous generations.
She closed her studio in 1955 and donated her photographic plates, numbering in the thousands, to the National Museum of Iceland.