Autumn Durald Arkapaw Makes Oscars History as First Woman to Win Best Cinematography

Autumn Durald Arkapaw won the Oscar for Best Cinematography for the film 'Sinners,' becoming the first woman ever to win in that category. She is also the first woman of color to receive this historic honor. Arkapaw broke another record by being the first female cinematographer to shoot a film using IMAX 65mm and Ultra Panavision cameras. The film 'Sinners' marks her second collaboration with director Ryan Coogler and received a total of 16 Oscar nominations.

Key Points: First Woman Wins Oscar for Best Cinematography

  • First woman to win Best Cinematography Oscar
  • First woman of color in the category
  • Shot with IMAX 65mm and Ultra Panavision
  • Second collaboration with director Ryan Coogler
  • Film earned 16 Oscar nominations
2 min read

Oscars 2026: 'Sinners' DP Autumn Durald Arkapaw makes history as FIRST woman to win Best Cinematography

Cinematographer Autumn Durald Arkapaw makes history at the 2026 Oscars as the first woman and first woman of color to win Best Cinematography for 'Sinners'.

"moments like this happen because of you guys - Autumn Durald Arkapaw"

Los Angeles, March 16

The supernatural horror-thriller Sinners continues its strong run at the ongoing Academy Awards. The film has already picked up several awards, and it has now added another big honour to its list.

Cinematographer Autumn Durald Arkapaw won the Oscar for Best Cinematography, creating history at the awards ceremony. With this win, she has become the first woman ever to win the Oscar in this category. Arkapaw, who is of Filipino and African American Creole descent, is also the first woman of colour to receive this honour.

According to Variety, in the history of the Best Cinematography category, only three women had been nominated before. These include Rachel Morrison for Mudbound in 2018, Ari Wegner for 'The Power of the Dog' in 2021, and Mandy Walker for Elvis in 2022.

Arkapaw also created another record while working on Sinners. She became the first female cinematographer to shoot a film using IMAX 65mm and Ultra Panavision cameras, according to Variety.

While accepting the award, Arkapaw thanked other women in the film industry and gave special mention to cinematographer Rachel Morrison.

"I have felt so much love from all the women on this whole campaign and gotten to meet so many people, and I just feel like moments like this happen because of you guys, and I want to thank you for that," she said.

Before the Oscars, Arkapaw had received nominations at the BAFTA Awards, the British Society of Cinematographers and the American Society of Cinematographers. However, she did not win those awards before Oscar night.

At the Oscars, she was nominated alongside Adolpho Veloso for Train Dreams, Michael Bauman for One Battle After Another, Dan Laustsen for Frankenstein, and Darius Khondji for Marty Supreme.

Sinners marks her second project with director Ryan Coogler. The two had earlier worked together on 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever'.

According to Variety, Sinners also made history by getting 16 nominations at the Oscars, including best picture, director, actor for Michael B. Jordan, supporting actress for Wunmi Mosaku, supporting actor for Delroy Lindo, original screenplay, casting, production design, cinematography, costume design, film editing, makeup and hairstyling, sound, visual effects, original score and original song for "I Lied to You".

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Fantastic news! Breaking a 98-year-old barrier. I hope this inspires more young girls in India to take up cinematography and other technical roles in film. We need more women DOPs in Bollywood and regional cinema too.
A
Arjun K
While this is a great step forward, it's also a bit sad that it took this long. Only three women nominated before her? The industry needs to do better in providing opportunities. That said, congratulations to Autumn Durald Arkapaw! Her work on 'Sinners' with IMAX cameras sounds incredible.
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Sarah B
As an expat living in Delhi, I watched the Oscars live. The moment she won was electric! It's a win for diversity on a global scale. Her Filipino and Creole heritage makes this even more significant. Representation matters everywhere.
K
Karthik V
I haven't seen 'Sinners' yet, but 16 Oscar nominations is no joke. Must be a brilliant film. Her achievement is historic, no doubt. Hope she collaborates with Indian directors someday. Our industry could learn a lot from such talent.
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Meera T
A respectful criticism: The article focuses a lot on her gender and heritage, which is important, but I wish it talked more about her actual craft. What was unique about her cinematography in 'Sinners'? That's what truly earned her the award. Still, a proud moment for women everywhere! ✨

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