Larsen was noted by Life magazine editors for her capacity to gain the trust of portrait subjects. The first nationally-distributed photograph of
Truman Capote was published in
LIFE Visits Yaddo, a
photo-essay by Larsen in the July 15, 1946 issue which includes a double portrait of Capote sitting at the feet of
Marguerite Young. Larson was the only photographic correspondent permitted to photograph
Yugoslavian leader Marshall
Josip Tito at the
Black Sea resort of
Sochi, Russia during his visit to the
Soviet Union, and the first American photographer permitted to visit
Outer Mongolia in over ten years in the summer of 1956, through invitation of the Mongolian ambassador whom she met in Moscow.
LIFE, July 22, 1957, 56–65, published many of her photographs taken in Mongolia by Lisa Larsen, who accompanied
The New York Times'
Jack Raymond. In 1957 she reported on the social aftermath of the
Polish Revolution and its effects on politics, industry, culture, and religion, and on displaced
Hungarian refugees at camps in
Yugoslavia,
Germany,
Switzerland, and
Austria. Photo-editor-in-chief,
Władysław Sławny of the Polish illustrated weekly newspaper
Świat ('The World', 1951–1969), determined to keep pace with Western counterparts
Life, Paris Match and
Picture Post during the
Cold War so published pictures by Larsen,
Magnum photographers and her other Western colleagues. After covering
Khrushchev again in 1958, on the anniversary of the 1945 “Liberation by the Red Army”, the
American National Press Photographers Association awarded her 'Magazine Photographer of the Year' in 1958, the first female photographer to receive it, She said; ==Tributes==