Photobooks USA 2000–25 looks at how the photobook became one of the most active forms of photographic expression in the United States over the past quarter-century. On view from June 11 to September 28, 2026, the exhibition gathers more than 50 titles and traces the ways artists have used books to respond to social, political, cultural and environmental change.
The selection brings together out-of-print publications and recent releases, showing both the reach and the range of the medium. Rather than building a strict canon, the exhibition presents books that reflect different aspects of American life, from urban crisis and migration to family history, race, labor, gender and place. It also points to the growth of photobook publishing itself, with more independent presses, more varied production methods and a broader field of artists using the format to circulate their work.
Among the titles included are
Here Is New York: A Democracy of Photographs by
Gilles Peress, Michael Shulan and Charles Traub;
Alec Soth’s
Sleeping By the Mississippi; An-My Lê’s
Small Wars;
LaToya Ruby Frazier’s
The Notion of Family; Nona Faustine’s
White Shoes; Jess T. Dugan’s
Look at me like you love me;
Carmen Winant’s
The Last Safe Abortion; and Rahim Fortune’s
Hardtack. Together, the books show how the photobook can operate as both an artistic object and a public record.
The exhibition is curated by ICP’s Creative Director David Campany, Associate Director of Exhibitions Sara Ickow and Curatorial Assistant malaika newsome. Their selection emphasizes the photobook not as a secondary form, but as a central part of contemporary photographic practice. In many cases, the book is where the work first reaches readers, and in some cases where its meaning becomes clearest.
Seen as a group, these publications map a changing country through pictures, sequence and design. They show how photographers have used the book format to slow down viewing, shape narrative and address the unsettled character of the United States in the early twenty-first century.
Image:
© Maximilian Ihlenburg for the International Center of Photography