Singer Adele is draped over her piano, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg sits at her desk, and documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras stands among bright set lights.

“It’s what we look like and what we do,” photographer Annie Leibovitz said of her series Women: New Portraits, Vogue reports. “We’re all people.”

Displayed at London’s Wapping Hydraulic Power Station, the photos are tacked to pin boards, with open spaces marked with notes for future subjects. Leibovitz said the series is “an unending project [that] goes on and on.” The work in progess will make its way to an additional nine cities over the next year and is free to the public, thanks to support from the financial services firm UBS.

The collection is a continuation of a series first published as a book in 1999, decades after Leibovitz became a household name after taking dozens of iconic portraits, from John Lennon and Yoko Ono for Rolling Stone to a very pregnant Demi Moore for a Vanity Fair cover.

Annie Leibovitz, New York City, 2012. (Photo: © Annie Leibovitz. From ‘Women: New Portraits.’)

The first installment of Women was a collaboration between Leibovitz and her late partner, Susan Sontag, who died in 2004. The photos rejected female stereotypes to represent a wide array of women at the close of the 20th century. Poet and musician Patti Smith, painter Agnes Martin, and installation artist Louise Bourgeois were among those featured.

“This is what women are now, as different, as varied, as heroic, as forlorn, as conventional, as unconventional,” Sontag wrote in the essay accompanying the book.

For the follow-up, Leibovitz worked with feminist writer and activist Gloria Steinem (who is also a subject) to explore many more revolutionary women, including Misty Copeland, who became the first black principal dancer of American Ballet Theatre in 2015.

Misty Copeland. (Photo: © Annie Leibovitz. From ‘Women: New Portraits.’)

Viewers will also notice some familiar-looking shots, such as an unpublished photo of Caitlyn Jenner from her Vanity Fair shoot last June. Leibovitz points to Jenner as an example of women’s progress in the past 15 years. “I didn’t expect the media to immediately embrace Caitlyn Jenner,” Liebovitz said at an opening event, according to Cool Hunting. “I was so moved by that. I think it’s definitely a step forward.”

Other recognizable women include actor Lupita Nyong’o, primatologist Jane Goodall, and Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel laureate and Myanmar opposition leader.

With all the women Leibovitz has captured with her camera, there is still one woman who has eluded her.

“I am trying very hard for Merkel,” Leibovitz said, according to The Guardian. She believes German Chancellor Angela Merkel is one of the most important women in the world.