Women's contribution to jazz has been mostly as singers, though a few have also been instrumentalists. If you'd like to give some of the ladies of jazz a place in your home, office or classroom, here are some posters and art prints featuring Billie Holiday, Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, Josephine Baker and -- in a rare treat -- Lil Armstrong, appearing with King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band.
Billie Holiday, Lady Day, is known for her blues and jazz music -- and also for her tragic and early death at 44, hastened by drug use and her out-of-control life. But her music still haunts us today.
Sometimes called the First Lady of Song, Ella Fitzgerald's long career as a jazz and pop diva has left a marvelous musical heritage.
One of the best-known entertainers in her day -- in France and Europe, even more than in the United States, where racial prejudice and political innuendo hampered her career -- Josephine Baker sang and danced her way to stardom. Period posters were often both exotic and erotic.
Posters of the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin.
Poster-sized versions of the Art Kane 1958 photograph of the women and men of Harlem's jazz scene.