Oscars 2026: Autumn Durald Arkapaw makes history as the first woman to win Oscar for Best Cinematography for ‘Sinners’


Autumn Durald Arkapaw, winner of the award for cinematography for ‘Sinners’ poses in the press room at the Oscars on Sunday, March 15, 2026, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.
| Photo Credit: AP

Autumn Durald Arkapaw became the first woman to win the Best Cinematography Oscar on Monday, March 16, 2026. The 46-year-old American was recognized for her work on Ryan Coogler’s Sinners.

The profession has come a long way since Arkapaw, whose varied credits include Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, The Last Showgirl and a Rihanna music video, started exploring cinematography as a career path.

Visual Story: The 98th Academy Awards

Only three women before her had been nominated in the category: Rachel Morrison (who worked with Coogler on Fruitvale Station and Black Panther) was the first for Mudbound in 2018, followed by Ari Wegner for The Power of the Dog and Mandy Walker for Elvis. Arkapaw was the first woman of color to be nominated.

For this year, Arkapaw was nominated alongside Michael Bauman (One Battle After Another), Dan Laustsen (Frankenstein), Darius Khondji (Marty Supreme) and Adolpho Veloso (Train Dreams) for Best Cinematography.

Sinners is project that was already historic for women in cinematography. Before it, no woman had ever shot a movie on IMAX film before.

“I heard a phrase that said you need to see you to be you,” she told The Associated Press last year. “I think for us females in business, the more women are able to shoot on large format, it will inspire the younger girls who maybe don’t think that they can get there.”

A native of Northern California, she studied art history at Loyola Marymount University before attending graduate school at the American Film Institute where she used a background in photography to pursue cinematography.

Arkapaw had shot Black Panther: Wakanda Forever on IMAX digital, but film presented its own set of challenges. The cameras are big and loud and have a reputation for being limiting. Before beginning, she consulted with “Oppenheimer cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema, who told her not to worry about the size or weight of the equipment and to shoot the movie as she would with any other kind of camera.

“Hearing that straight off was inspiring and encouraging and we took that advice and just told our story,” Arkapaw said. “It was very freeing.”

In the end, they decided to employ a combination of IMAX film and Ultra Panavision 70, an even rarer format that Quentin Tarantino resurrected for “The Hateful Eight.”

The scene is the introduction to Jack O’Connell’s Irish vampire Remmick and the Choctaw trying to hunt him down, which they shot like a Western as the sun sets in the distance.

“We had a lot of beautiful crane work in that and some intimate stuff. Ryan loves a hallway, so there’s a Steadicam shot inside. It’s very eerie,” she said. “I can’t see that scene in any other format now.”

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