Minnie McAndrews is a photographer and writer whose work explores womanhood, mythology, and the relationship between humanity and the natural world. Raised in North Carolina, the American South remains central to her practice, shaping both the visual atmosphere and emotional tensions present throughout her work. She is drawn to the contradictions of the Southern landscape, its beauty, stillness, and intimacy, alongside its sense of isolation, suffocation, and lingering history.

Her practice draws from personal experience to create images that exist between reality and myth. Landscapes, animals, and the human body recur throughout her work as symbols of vulnerability, instinct, and transformation.

She is interested in the ways stories move across image and language, using photography as both a documentary and interpretive medium. Blurring the boundaries between the personal and symbolic, her practice reflects on how emotion, perception, and memory become embedded within both the body and the landscape over time.