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Win a Solo Exhibition in April 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!
Win a Solo Exhibition in April 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!

Portrait of Milwaukee

From September 06, 2019 to March 01, 2020
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Portrait of Milwaukee
700 N. Art Museum Drive
Milwaukee, WI 53202
What made Milwaukee into the city it is today, and what does it mean to call oneself a Milwaukeean?
Portrait of Milwaukee reveals a deep connection between the city of Milwaukee and its residents. Photographs from the 1930s through the 2010s highlight some of the people, movements, businesses, and neighborhoods that have helped make Milwaukee what it is today. From small businesses to community churches, tannery workers to New Wave rockers, the subjects of the pictures in the exhibition show a midwestern city that is just as dynamic and diverse as the people who call it home.
Photographs in the exhibition are drawn from the Museum's collection, as well as from local collections that are rarely on public view.
Stay up-to-date  with call for entries, deadlines and other news about exhibitions, galleries, publications, & special events.

Exhibitions Closing Soon

State of Presence: Women’s History Month Pop-Up Exhibit
Bronx Documentary Center | The Bronx, NY
From March 06, 2026 to March 09, 2026
State of Presence: Women's History Month Pop-Up Exhibit, on view from March 6 through 9, 2026 at the Bronx Documentary Center, celebrates the work of five contemporary female photographers who explore what it means to inhabit space with awareness and intention. Featuring Cat Byrnes, Lex Kim, Lucka Ngô, Sabrina Santiago, and Emily Sujay Sanchez, the exhibition focuses on presence as an active, shifting experience—moments of stillness and movement, attention and reflection, vulnerability and assertion. The images in State of Presence capture intimate, everyday encounters that often go unnoticed. Byrnes’ work, ranging from contemplative solitude to vibrant street life, examines the interplay between public and private personas, while Kim’s documentary-focused practice emphasizes long-term engagement with her subjects, revealing layered stories through nuanced observation. Ngô’s photography, shaped by her Vietnamese-Czech heritage and Bronx upbringing, foregrounds the quiet rhythms of community life, cultivating trust and connection with the people she photographs. Santiago transforms fleeting gestures and encounters into reflections on identity and belonging, drawing from street photography’s tradition of immediacy. Sanchez documents emotionally charged moments in the Bronx, blurring the line between observer and participant to create visual narratives that resonate with intimacy and honesty. Together, these artists explore presence as both a personal and social concept. A returned gaze, a moment of pause, or a body asserting itself in space becomes a statement of visibility and resilience. The exhibition invites viewers to consider how everyday actions, gestures, and interactions shape our sense of self and community. Through careful composition, attention to detail, and empathetic observation, the photographers reveal the complexity of presence as lived experience. Curated by the staff of the Bronx Documentary Center, State of Presence honors Women’s History Month by highlighting diverse voices and perspectives, creating a dialogue around visibility, empowerment, and the artistry of everyday life. It is a space where the quiet and the immediate coexist, reflecting the multiplicity of ways women claim and navigate public and private worlds. Image: © Cat Byrnes, courtesy of the Bronx Documentary Center
Crafting Sanctuaries: Black Spaces of the Great Depression South
Museum of Art + Light (MoA+L) | Manhattan, KS
From August 20, 2025 to March 09, 2026
Crafting Sanctuaries: Black Spaces of the Great Depression South seeks to change how we envision the Great Depression and its ‘other Southern half.’ Between 1935 and 1944, a group of photographers working for the Farm Security Administration created a massive photo-documentation portrait of the living conditions of American agricultural workers in the rural South. The images that were selected for mass publication, many of which have become icons of this period of American history, offered a narrow view of these Southern regions and their inhabitants. Spanning the work of Russell Lee, Walker Evans, Marion Post Wolcott, Arthur Rothstein, Jack Delano, Dorothea Lange, and Ben Shahn; and six Southern states (Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Florida Mississippi, and Missouri), this exhibition foregrounds photos of private dwellings and public gathering spaces of Black Southerners. Crafting Sanctuaries reveals how these Depression-era Black Southerners worked to construct and reflect a sense of home and self by imagining, designing, and adorning their interior worlds and communal spaces. Farming houses, humble shacks, churches, schoolhouses, and barbershops are refashioned into havens of expression, comfort, and refuge. Organized by Art Bridges. Curated by Tamir Williams, Curatorial Associate, with support from Ashley Holland, Curator and Director of Curatorial Initiatives, Isabel Ouweleen, Curatorial Research Assistant, and Javier Rivero Ramos, Assistant Curator. Image: Russell Lee (1903-1986), Southeast Missouri Farms. Sharecropper’s child combing hair in bedroom of shack home near La Forge project, Missouri, 1938, printed 2024, silver gelatin print, 8 x 10 in. Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI Collection, LC-DIG-fsa-8b20258
Julie Moore: With gratitude and love
LightBox Photographic Gallery | Astoria, OR
From February 14, 2026 to March 11, 2026
The exhibition with gratitude & love: postcards from the intersection of memory & myth invites viewers into a quiet realm where the reverberations of personal experience meet the timeless pull of shared stories. Each work feels like a small offering, a moment held still long enough to be revisited, reconsidered, and gently passed from one imagination to another. Rather than recounting memories directly, the pieces evoke their atmosphere—traces of tenderness, longing, and discovery shaped by the narratives we inherit and the ones we create for ourselves. In this series, each artwork takes on the essence of a postcard—an abbreviated message that suggests far more than it states. These fragments travel between inner worlds and collective mythology, reminding us that memory rarely stands alone. It is filtered through symbols, rituals, and stories that linger in the cultural landscape. Through layered surfaces and delicate mixed-media techniques, the artist builds images that appear both intimate and archetypal, like echoes of moments half-remembered yet deeply felt. The use of translucence and fragmented form reinforces the sense that memory is elusive, shifting each time it is revisited. These textures suggest vulnerability, but also endurance—an acknowledgment that even the faintest recollection can hold remarkable emotional weight. In this space, myth becomes a companion to memory, offering context, resonance, and a framework for understanding how personal experience becomes part of a larger human pattern. The exhibition asks viewers to pause, to let each “postcard” open into a personal reflection. What stories shape our sense of gratitude? Which memories feel illuminated by mythic significance? Through this shared contemplation, the work becomes a bridge between individual lives and universal experience. Ultimately, with gratitude & love stands as a tribute to the profound beauty found in remembrance. It honors the fragile, enduring connections that guide us—between people, places, and the myths we carry forward—and celebrates the quiet revelations that emerge when memory and meaning intertwine. Image: © Julie Moore
The Photographic Nude 2026
LightBox Photographic Gallery | Astoria, OR
From February 14, 2026 to March 11, 2026
The Photographic Nude 2026 returns to LightBox Photographic Gallery in Astoria, Oregon, from February 14 through March 11, 2026, presenting a juried selection of work by twenty-seven photographers from across the United States. This annual exhibition offers a thoughtful exploration of the human form, embracing photography’s long-standing engagement with the nude as both subject and symbol. The exhibition opens with an artist’s reception on Saturday, February 14, from 4 to 7 pm, inviting the public to engage directly with the artists and their work. Spanning a wide range of visual approaches, The Photographic Nude 2026 reflects the diversity of contemporary photographic practice. Classical studies grounded in balance, light, and proportion appear alongside experimental and provocative interpretations that challenge conventional ideas of beauty and representation. Some works focus on the full figure, while others isolate fragments of the body, encouraging viewers to consider form, gesture, and surface as expressive elements in their own right. Together, these photographs reveal the nude not as a fixed genre, but as a continually evolving conversation. Juried by LightBox directors Chelsea and Michael Granger, the exhibition situates current practice within a broader photographic lineage. From the modernist clarity of early twentieth-century photographers to more psychologically charged and conceptual approaches, the nude has remained a vital testing ground for photographers seeking to balance aesthetics, vulnerability, and meaning. The selected works demonstrate how contemporary artists continue to reinterpret this tradition, responding to historical precedents while asserting individual vision. By bringing together voices from different regions and generations, The Photographic Nude 2026 underscores the enduring relevance of the human body as a site of artistic inquiry. The exhibition invites viewers to look slowly and thoughtfully, recognizing the nude as more than an object of display. Instead, it becomes a space for reflection on intimacy, identity, and the shared physicality that connects us all. In this setting, photography reaffirms its capacity to honor the body with nuance, respect, and creative freedom. Image: Mysterious Brunette © Lloyd Kimmeldorf.
Beuford Smith: A Retrospective of Community, Witness, and History
Keith de Lellis Gallery | New York, NY
From February 11, 2026 to March 12, 2026
Beuford Smith: A Retrospective of Community, Witness, and History presents a profound and long-overdue examination of a photographer whose work shaped the visual language of African American life in the second half of the twentieth century. On view from February 11 to March 12, 2026, the exhibition spans decades of Smith’s practice, bringing together intimate scenes of daily life with landmark moments of national significance. Through his lens, history unfolds not as abstraction, but as lived experience—felt on sidewalks, in homes, and within tightly knit communities. Beuford Smith photographed from a position of trust and belonging. His images move seamlessly between quiet domestic moments and charged public spaces, capturing joy, tension, humor, and resilience with remarkable sensitivity. Rather than observing from the margins, Smith worked from within the communities he photographed, producing images marked by emotional precision and dignity. Family gatherings, neighborhood streets, and fleeting encounters are rendered with the same care as moments of collective upheaval, forming a body of work that feels both personal and historically grounded. At the center of the retrospective is Smith’s extraordinary photographic response to April 4, 1968, the day Dr. Martin Luther King JR. was assassinated. On the streets of Harlem, Smith recorded the immediate aftermath as grief and disbelief swept through the community. His photographs capture faces suspended between shock and resolve, crowds bound together by sorrow, and the charged stillness of a historic rupture. These images stand as rare visual testimony—documents of mourning made by someone who shared fully in the weight of that moment. Beyond his own photographic output, Smith was a vital force in shaping African American photography. As a founding member of the Kamoinge Workshop and a driving presence behind the Black Photographers Annual, he helped build platforms for artists long excluded from institutional recognition. This retrospective affirms Smith’s legacy as both artist and advocate, reminding us that photography can preserve memory, challenge erasure, and carry history forward through images rooted in truth and human connection. Image: The Day After MLK was Assassinated, NYC, 1968 © Beuford Smith
Weight of It All: Heather Mattera and Ben Mattera
CENTER Santa Fe | Santa Fe, NM
From February 13, 2026 to March 13, 2026
Weight of It All, presented by CENTER in Santa Fe from February 13 to March 13, 2026, is a deeply intimate collaborative photographic project by Heather Mattera and her son, Ben Mattera. Developed over several years, the work emerged from a moment of quiet crisis, as a family confronted the slow, frightening disappearance of a teenage son into an eating disorder. Rather than documenting recovery as a linear process, the project dwells in uncertainty, vulnerability, and the fragile spaces where care and fear coexist. The earliest images began almost accidentally, with Heather photographing still lifes of foods her son once loved but had begun to refuse. These carefully composed scenes became a silent form of communication when conversation felt impossible. The photographs hold absence as much as presence, transforming everyday objects into symbols of longing, grief, and vigilance. In these images, nourishment becomes both literal and metaphorical, reflecting the tension between control and care, refusal and desire, that defined their daily lives. Two years later, Ben stepped into the process as an active collaborator. Together, mother and son shaped a visual dialogue that traces isolation, tenderness, and the slow reemergence of connection. The photographs resist spectacle, favoring restraint and honesty. Bodies, gestures, and domestic spaces are rendered with sensitivity, allowing viewers to feel the weight of what is unsaid. The collaboration itself becomes an act of trust, revealing how making images together offered a way back to one another when words were insufficient. Beyond its personal origins, Weight of It All speaks to broader experiences of caregiving, mental health, and resilience. Heather Mattera’s background in therapeutic practice and community-based work informs the project’s ethical care and emotional clarity. The exhibition stands as a testament to the power of photography to hold pain without resolving it, to witness without fixing. Ultimately, the work affirms a quiet truth: love endures not through solutions or certainty, but through sustained presence, attention, and the courage to remain. Image: © Heather Mattera and Ben Mattera
POLAROID: The Instant Image
Praxis Gallery | Minneapolis, MN
From February 21, 2026 to March 14, 2026
From February 21 to March 14, 2026, POLAROID: The Instant Image brings together a group of artists who embrace the immediacy and physicality of instant photography as a living, evolving medium. Curated by the directors of Praxis Gallery, the exhibition considers the instant photograph not simply as a nostalgic artifact, but as a material object shaped by chemistry, touch, and time. In an era dominated by frictionless digital images, these works insist on presence—on the singular print that cannot be endlessly revised or replicated. Since its introduction by Polaroid Corporation in the mid-20th century, instant photography has occupied a distinctive space between experimentation and accessibility. The process—once revolutionary for its speed—has become newly relevant for its resistance to perfection. Each exposure unfolds through chemical reaction, yielding subtle tonal shifts, surface irregularities, and the occasional flaw. Rather than correct these variations, the artists featured here welcome them as collaborators. Chance becomes an aesthetic strategy, and unpredictability a form of authorship. The exhibition spans a wide array of instant processes, from classic Polaroid formats to Fuji Instax, peel-apart films, and large-format 4×5 materials. Techniques such as emulsion lifts and image transfers extend the life of the photograph beyond its frame, allowing the image to migrate, wrinkle, or fracture. Some works are presented as original instant prints, intimate in scale and direct in impact; others are reproduced from high-resolution scans, printed at true instant-film dimensions to preserve their tactile proportions. In every case, scale matters. The smallness of the object demands proximity, encouraging viewers to lean in and encounter the photograph as a thing held as much as seen. POLAROID: The Instant Image ultimately foregrounds the photograph as artifact. These works bear the visible traces of their making—edges, fingerprints, chemical blooms—reminding us that photography can still be an event in time, fixed in a single, unrepeatable instant. Image: © Ken Lorentz
Windows to the Unexpected
Marshall Gallery | Santa Monica, CA
From January 17, 2026 to March 14, 2026
From January 17 through March 14, 2026, Marshall Gallery presents Windows to the Unexpected, the fourth solo exhibition at the gallery by the Spanish duo Albarrán Cabrera. Featuring works from their recent series The Indestructible alongside selections from earlier bodies of work, the exhibition coincides with the release of their eighth artist book and offers a sweeping view of a collaboration that has steadily deepened since the late 1990s. Comprised of Ángel Albarrán and Anna Cabrera, the Barcelona-based artists approach photography less as documentation than as meditation. Drawing influence from literature, cinema, philosophy, and even physics, their images hover between presence and disappearance. In The Indestructible, they reflect on nature’s persistence—on light filtering through branches, horizons dissolving into atmosphere, and subtle forces that endure beyond human measure. These photographs function as thresholds, inviting viewers into spaces where perception slows and certainty softens. The exhibition also includes select works from The Mouth of Krishna, Kairos, and Opticks, the latter among their most experimental explorations of light and surface. Throughout, Albarrán Cabrera’s meticulous printing techniques are central to the experience. Employing pigment inks on hand-coated papers adorned with gold leaf, they create prints that shimmer and shift as one moves before them. The gold does not decorate; it transforms, catching ambient light and lending the image a quiet radiance that feels almost devotional. Each photograph asserts itself as an object—crafted, tactile, and singular. Collected by institutions and private patrons across Europe and beyond, the duo’s work has earned international recognition while remaining steadfastly introspective. Windows to the Unexpected affirms their belief that photography can still offer moments of pause and contemplation. In an age of instant images, Albarrán Cabrera ask us to look longer—to find, within the luminous surface, intimations of time, memory, and an enduring life force that resists erasure. Image: Albarrán Cabrera, The Indestructible #70040, 2025 Pigment ink on gold leaf, 20 x 29 in © Albarrán Cabrera
Janet Russek + David Scheinbaum: Giverny
Pie Projects Contemporary Art | Santa Fe, NM
From February 14, 2026 to March 14, 2026
Pie Projects Contemporary Art in Santa Fe presents Janet Russek + David Scheinbaum: Giverny, an exhibition on view from February 14 through March 14, 2026, that reflects a shared artistic journey rooted in observation, patience, and reverence for place. The project began with a single visit to Claude Monet’s gardens, an experience that lingered and eventually drew the artists back to Giverny with a renewed sense of purpose. Granted rare access to photograph the gardens across all four seasons, Russek and Scheinbaum approach this historic site not as documentarians, but as attentive interpreters of light, growth, and change. The resulting photographs move beyond the familiar imagery associated with Giverny. Rather than replicating the iconic views that have been endlessly reproduced, the artists focus on quieter moments where form, color, and atmosphere subtly shift. Seasonal transitions become central to the work, revealing cycles of bloom, decay, dormancy, and renewal. These rhythms echo long-standing traditions in landscape photography, where time and perception are as important as subject matter. The gardens emerge as a living system, shaped by human care yet constantly redefining itself. Both artists bring decades of experience and deep ties to photographic history to the collaboration. Russek’s background in still life and metaphor infuses the images with a sense of introspection, while Scheinbaum’s longstanding engagement with portraiture and photographic scholarship lends clarity and structure. Their shared histories as assistants to influential figures in photography inform a disciplined, respectful approach to the medium, one that values craftsmanship and continuity. Together, they balance personal response with historical awareness. Presented in Santa Fe, a city long connected to photographic innovation and tradition, Giverny resonates as a meditation on influence and inheritance. The exhibition invites viewers to slow their gaze, to consider how places shaped by artistic vision continue to inspire new interpretations. Through their collaborative lens, Russek and Scheinbaum offer not a homage, but a thoughtful conversation across time, where nature, art, and memory quietly converge. Image: Janet Russek, Giverny, 2023 © Janet Russek
Surviving Shadows - Afghan Art in the Face of Suppression
Apexart | New York, NY
From January 16, 2026 to March 14, 2026
Surviving Shadows – Afghan Art in the Face of Suppression, presented at apexart in New York and curated by Yama Rahimi, offers a profound and urgent meditation on artistic survival under extreme political repression. The exhibition emerges from the aftermath of August 2021, when the Taliban’s return to power abruptly dismantled Afghanistan’s cultural ecosystem. Public spaces for art disappeared almost overnight, and artists found themselves silenced, surveilled, and endangered. Within this climate, creative expression became both a lifeline and a liability. To make art was to assert identity and dignity, yet also to risk exposure in a system that punishes visibility. This tension lies at the heart of the exhibition’s emotional force. Through photographs, texts, videos, paintings, and personal testimonies, the exhibition traces fragmented artistic journeys. Some works shown no longer exist, having been destroyed by their creators to protect themselves and their families. Others were looted, abandoned during hurried escapes, or lost during searches. Alongside these absences are works that survived clandestinely inside Afghanistan, as well as new creations made in exile. Together, they form a constellation of presence and loss, where what cannot be shown is as powerful as what remains visible. Rather than presenting a single narrative, the exhibition embraces multiplicity. It highlights artists who fled to Europe or the United States carrying only digital traces of their work, alongside those who stayed behind, continuing to create under constant threat. The exhibition does not frame Afghan artists solely as victims, but as active agents who transform fear, displacement, and silence into acts of resistance. Art here becomes testimony, protest, and memory all at once. More than a temporary exhibition, Surviving Shadows functions as a living archive of contemporary Afghan art. It preserves fragile histories that risk erasure and insists on the endurance of creative voices despite attempts to extinguish them. By honoring resilience, adaptability, and hope, the exhibition ensures that these artists—whether hidden, displaced, or exiled—remain seen, remembered, and heard. Image: Akbari Farshad, What is your dream? © Akbari Farshad
Albarrán Cabrera: Windows to the Unexpected
Marshall Gallery | Los Angeles, CA
From January 17, 2026 to March 14, 2026
Marshall Gallery presents Albarrán Cabrera: Windows to the Unexpected, an exhibition that invites viewers to step into a world shaped by contemplation, nuance, and quiet wonder. On view from January 17 to March 14, 2026, the exhibition marks the fourth solo presentation of the Spanish duo at the gallery and brings together works from their most recent series, The Indestructible, alongside select photographs spanning their collaborative career. Together, these images form a sequence of visual thresholds—moments where the familiar gently dissolves into uncertainty. Composed of Ángel Albarrán and Anna Cabrera, the duo has long pursued a poetic approach to photography that favors intuition over explanation. Their images are not meant to be read quickly or definitively, but encountered slowly, allowing meaning to emerge through sustained looking. In The Indestructible, nature appears not as a subject to be described, but as a presence that endures—quietly resilient amid impermanence and change. Landscapes, fragments of light, and suspended forms evoke memory and time as fluid states, hovering between what is seen and what is felt. A defining element of Albarrán Cabrera’s practice lies in their extraordinary attention to materiality. Through meticulous printing processes and the use of hand-coated gold-leafed papers, their photographs take on a luminous, tactile quality that shifts with movement and light. Pigment inks interact with reflective surfaces, creating depth and vibrancy that resist reproduction and insist on physical presence. These works encourage viewers to slow down, to consider the photograph not merely as an image, but as an object shaped by care and intention. This exhibition coincides with the release of the artists’ eighth book, underscoring their sustained commitment to the photobook as an extension of their visual language. Influenced by literature, philosophy, and cinema, Albarrán Cabrera continue to build a body of work that defies easy categorization. Windows to the Unexpected offers a reflective pause—a space where perception is unsettled and renewed, and where photography becomes a quiet act of endurance. Image: Kairos #4021, 2015 Cyanotype over Platinum palladium print © Albarrán Cabrera
Alison Rossiter: Semblance
Yossi Milo Gallery | New York, NY
From January 15, 2026 to March 14, 2026
Alison Rossiter: Semblance, on view at Yossi Milo Gallery from January 15 to March 14, 2026, presents a quietly powerful exploration of photography stripped of the camera yet deeply rooted in its history. For her fourth solo exhibition with the gallery, Rossiter draws from her extensive archive of expired photographic papers, transforming materials once designed for utility into meditations on time, process, and perception. The exhibition reflects a practice grounded in restraint, where chance and intention exist in careful balance. Rossiter’s work begins with acts of selection and discovery. She develops vintage and antique papers—some more than a century old—allowing their latent chemistry to reveal tonal shifts, imperfections, and unexpected textures. These works echo the visual languages of Minimalism and Abstract Expressionism, while remaining unmistakably photographic in their reliance on light-sensitive surfaces. In Semblance, subtle gradations of black, gray, and white carry the weight of history, offering images that feel both ancient and resolutely contemporary. A central grouping within the exhibition pairs obsolete daguerreotype plates with early photographic papers, aligning materials from different technological moments into spare, vertical compositions. These works evoke thresholds between invention and obsolescence, progress and decay. Their surfaces—scarred, mottled, and reflective—suggest landscapes, horizons, or fields of color, quietly recalling the ambitions of postwar abstraction while remaining anchored in photographic materiality. Time itself becomes an active collaborator, shaping each surface long after its original purpose has expired. The exhibition also introduces a body of work inspired by Man Ray’s early textile constructions, extending Rossiter’s ongoing dialogue with art history. By assembling gaslight photographic papers into patterned forms, she revisits early twentieth-century experiments in abstraction through the lens of contemporary reflection. Silver mirroring and chemical shifts shimmer across the surfaces, functioning both as physical phenomena and as metaphors for memory, distance, and endurance. In Semblance, Rossiter invites viewers to slow down and look closely, rewarding patience with subtle complexity. Her works do not illustrate the past; they embody it. Through modest means and rigorous attention, the exhibition affirms photography’s enduring capacity to evolve, even when working with materials long considered finished. Image: Alison Rossiter (American, b. 1953) Eastman Kodak Polycontrast F, expired September 1977, processed 2017, 2025 © Alison Rossiter
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