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An-My Lê: On Contested Terrain

From January 25, 2020 to January 18, 2021
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An-My Lê: On Contested Terrain
4400 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
An-My Lê: On Contested Terrain is the first comprehensive survey of the politically charged work of photographer An-My Lê; (American, born Vietnam, 1960). Featuring over 100 photographs, this exhibition presents seven of Lê's series, providing insight into her evocative images that draw on a landscape tradition to address the complexity of war.

Intimate and timely, this expansive exhibition explores the intricacies of armed combat through the work of a photographer who lived through the Vietnam War. Through Lê's lens, viewers are exposed to military training, maneuvers, and reenactments, and are invited to question their own relationship to, and complicity in, conflict.

An-My Lê: On Contested Terrain also presents new photographs from Lê's ongoing series Silent General. These new works grapple with the legacy of America's Civil War and connect to the complexities of our current socio-political moment. Taking inspiration from Walt Whitman's autobiographical Specimen Days, the photographs probe the ways in which past conflicts influence and shape the present landscape in America.

While Lê is represented in many major museum collections, An-My Lê: On Contested Terrain is the first ever survey of her work in an American museum. The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully-illustrated catalogue featuring many never-before-published images.

An-My Lê: On Contested Terrain is organized by Dan Leers, curator of photography at Carnegie Museum of Art.
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Exhibitions Closing Soon

Catherine Opie: Holding Blue
Regen Projects | Los Angeles, CA
From May 28, 2026 to July 03, 2026
Holding Blue, on view at Regen Projects from May 28 to July 3, 2026, brings together a new body of work by Catherine Opie that reflects a sustained engagement with landscape, memory, and the material possibilities of photography. Marking the artist’s twelfth exhibition with the gallery, the presentation unfolds as both a visual and sensory meditation on the Norwegian environment, shaped by extended periods of observation and a deliberate attention to light and atmosphere. At the center of the exhibition is a series of large-scale photographs capturing the mountains of Norway during the elusive “blue hour,” a fleeting moment in polar winter when the landscape is bathed in a deep, saturated hue. Produced during a road trip in early 2024, these images emphasize duration and presence, with Opie approaching each mountain as if it were a portrait subject. The resulting photographs carry a quiet intensity, balancing formal precision with an emotional undercurrent tied to environmental fragility and the passage of time. Complementing the photographic works are ceramic sculptures that translate these landscapes into tactile form. Developed both before and after the journey, the sculptures reflect a process of anticipation and recollection, offering a physical counterpart to the photographic image. Their surfaces and contours suggest a more intimate, almost haptic engagement with place, reinforcing the exhibition’s broader dialogue between perception and memory. Additional photographic series expand this inquiry, juxtaposing natural vistas with elements of the built environment. Images of vernacular architecture and remote settlements situate human presence within a vast and often overwhelming terrain. Throughout the exhibition, Opie draws on a long tradition of landscape representation while quietly reworking its conventions, favoring sustained looking over spectacle. Together, the works in Holding Blue form a cohesive exploration of how photography can register both the physical reality of a place and the internal experience of encountering it. Image: Catherine Opie. Untitled #12 (Norway Mountain), 2024. © Catherine Opie
Once the Ocean Floor
Haines Gallery | San Francisco, CA
From May 08, 2026 to July 03, 2026
At Haines Gallery, Once the Ocean Floor brings together four distinct photographic practices that place the natural world at the center of image-making. On view from May 8 to July 3, 2026, the group exhibition features works by John Chiara, Linda Connor, David Maisel, and Meghann Riepenhoff. Rather than treating landscape as a passive subject, the exhibition presents nature as collaborator, witness, and force, reshaping the very conditions of photographic production. Chiara’s large-scale Ilfochrome prints, created using hand-built camera obscuras, reveal an approach where process remains visibly embedded in the final image. Light leaks, chemical drips, and physical marks are left intact, emphasizing photography as a material object rather than a seamless illusion. His new works, developed during a 2025 residency in Georgia, move between wooded thickets and open skies, balancing clarity and mystery. These images feel both intimate and monumental, shaped as much by atmosphere as by composition. The exhibition takes its title from Connor’s long-standing series documenting the rocky landscapes of Ladakh in northern India, terrain that once lay beneath an ancient ocean. Her photographs of limestone formations and fossil-rich surfaces evoke geological time on an almost unimaginable scale. Alongside them, Maisel’s aerial views of the Great Salt Lake confront a more urgent environmental reality. His Spiraling series transforms evaporation ponds and industrial sites into abstract fields of color and geometry, where beauty and ecological devastation exist in uneasy tension. Through these images, environmental crisis becomes both visually seductive and deeply unsettling. Riepenhoff extends this dialogue by allowing the landscape to physically inscribe itself onto her cyanotypes. Exposed directly to water, wind, and freezing temperatures, her works carry the marks of environmental contact rather than simple representation. In her State Shift series, crystalline forms and sweeping textures reflect the fragility of ecosystems under pressure. Together, the four artists propose a broader understanding of photography—one in which authorship is shared with the world itself. At Haines Gallery, Once the Ocean Floor becomes not only an exhibition of images, but an invitation to reconsider how art can register our changing relationship with the planet. Image: David Maisel, Spiraling 6, 2024 © David Maisel, courtesy of the Haines Gallery
Christopher Payne: 16 Tons
Benrubi Gallery | New York, NY
From May 28, 2026 to July 04, 2026
Christopher Payne’s 16 Tons turns industrial photography into a study of structure, scale and repetition. On view at Benrubi Gallery from May 28 through July 2, 2026, the exhibition presents nine large-format photographs drawn from Payne’s wider body of work on American manufacturing, alongside new images shaped by the same long-term interest in how things are made. The photographs move through factory interiors, production lines and highly specialized workspaces where the human figure is often reduced to a partial presence. In some images, hands appear only as points of reference, handling materials such as artificial flowers or guiding processes that are otherwise dominated by machinery. In others, people disappear almost entirely, leaving robots, lifting devices and industrial systems to define the frame. Payne’s attention stays fixed on the visual logic of these spaces: the geometry of repeated forms, the weight of materials, the rhythm of assembly. What gives the exhibition its shape is the way the photographs speak to one another. Rather than standing as isolated records, they are arranged as visual pairs, linked by correspondence rather than explanation. An image of one process echoes another in color, scale or composition, suggesting that different industries can share a similar structure even when their materials and purposes differ. This approach gives the exhibition a quiet coherence and shifts the emphasis from subject matter to formal relationship. The title 16 Tons points back to the 1955 coal-mining song made famous by Tennessee Ernie Ford, a reference that brings labor, debt and physical strain into view. Payne’s photographs do not dwell on nostalgia or critique alone. Instead, they register the conditions behind production: the systems that shape work, the machinery that replaces it, and the patterns left behind when labor becomes part of a larger industrial process. With more than two decades spent documenting American industrial and institutional spaces, Payne has developed a clear visual language built on patience and precision. 16 Tons reflects that method in a distilled form, presenting industry not as spectacle but as a set of enduring forms. Image: Christopher Payne, Untitled (CP130378), 2025 © Christopher Payne
Gestures of Care, Resilience, and Connection
CPW - Center for Photography at Woodstock | Kingston, NY
From May 30, 2026 to July 05, 2026
The Community Gallery at CPW opens with Gestures of Care, Resilience, and Connection, a group exhibition by the Women Photographers Collective of the Mid-Hudson Valley that brings together sixteen artists working across different photographic approaches. On view from May 30 to July 5, 2026, the show frames photography as a way to register support, attention and shared experience at a time when many people feel isolated or divided. The exhibition focuses on ordinary but revealing moments: family life, local surroundings, small acts of solidarity and collective action. Rather than presenting a single theme or visual style, it brings together distinct voices that speak to one another through common concerns. The result is a portrait of community as something active and unfinished, built through relationships rather than fixed identity. The participating artists include Joan Barker, Ana Bergen, Shari Diamond, Jill Enfield, Judit German-Heins, Karen Ghostlaw, Lori Grinker, Morgan Gwenwald, Maria Fernanda Hubeaut, Kay Kenny, Dana Matthews, Meryl Meisler, Adina Scherer, Carla Shapiro, Kate Warren and Ruth Wetzel. Their work reflects a range of perspectives and subjects, from intimate domestic scenes to broader social observations. Some images are rooted in personal life, while others look outward toward shared spaces and public gestures. The exhibition also marks an important step for CPW’s Community Gallery, a new space dedicated to local groups, artist collectives and nonprofit projects. The gallery is designed as a rotating venue for short-run exhibitions, giving room to voices from different parts of the region. That structure fits the spirit of the show, which places emphasis on exchange, visibility and the value of making work together. By gathering these photographs under one roof, Gestures of Care, Resilience, and Connection presents community not as a slogan, but as a set of everyday actions and relationships that continue to hold shape under pressure. Image: © Kate Warren, courtesy of the Center for Photography at Woodstock
Beyond Boundaries: Three Decades of Contemporary Chinese Art at the Smart
Smart Museum of Art | Chicago, IL
From March 29, 2026 to July 05, 2026
Beyond Boundaries: Three Decades of Contemporary Chinese Art at the Smart traces a layered history of artistic experimentation and critical inquiry at the Smart Museum of Art from March 29 to July 5, 2026. Rooted in the University of Chicago’s longstanding engagement with contemporary Chinese art, the exhibition reflects a sustained effort to position these practices within a global conversation. Since the late 1990s, curatorial initiatives led by Wu Hung have reshaped how such work is studied and understood, opening new perspectives on transnational artistic exchange. Drawing from the museum’s collection as well as archival material and recent acquisitions, the exhibition unfolds as both a retrospective and a living archive. Early moments of experimentation resonate alongside more recent works, revealing an ongoing negotiation between continuity and change. The reference to Transience, the influential 1999 exhibition, lingers throughout, emphasizing the importance of ephemerality, process, and conceptual risk in shaping the field. What emerges is not a fixed narrative but a constellation of practices that resist singular definition. The artists gathered here engage with boundaries in multiple forms—geographical, political, and material. Figures such as Ai Weiwei and Xu Bing interrogate systems of authority and language, while others like Song Dong and Xing Danwen turn toward personal memory and urban transformation. Across media ranging from installation to photography and video, these works explore how individuals move through rapidly shifting environments. Their approaches often embrace fragmentation, repetition, and displacement, reflecting broader conditions of uncertainty and adaptation. Rather than presenting contemporary Chinese art as a unified category, Beyond Boundaries highlights its internal diversity and its capacity for reinvention. The exhibition invites viewers to consider how artistic practices respond to constraint not only by resisting it, but by transforming it into new forms of expression. In this space, boundaries appear less as limits than as sites of tension and possibility, where meaning remains in flux and history continues to unfold. Image: Wang Wei, 1/30th of a Second Underwater, 1999, chromogenic transparencies on translucent polyester base. Smart Museum of Art, The University of Chicago, Purchase, Gift of Carl Rungius, by exchange, 2001.121d ©Wang Wei
The Museum of the Old Colony: An Art Installation by Pablo Delano
New Britain Museum of American Art | New Britain, CT
From March 14, 2026 to July 05, 2026
The Museum of the Old Colony: An Art Installation by Pablo Delano, on view at the New Britain Museum of American Art from March 14 to July 5, 2026, is an ambitious, immersive work that challenges how history is constructed, displayed, and absorbed. Conceived as a fictional yet unsettlingly familiar institution, the installation invites visitors to step inside a museum that mirrors the authoritative language of official archives while quietly unraveling their assumptions. Through this layered environment, Delano confronts the enduring realities of colonial power and cultural memory as they relate to Puerto Rico and its complex relationship with the United States. Rather than presenting discrete artworks, Delano assembles a dense constellation of archival photographs, printed matter, moving images, and found objects that function together as a single evolving artwork. Drawing on the visual strategies of ethnographic and historical museums, the installation reveals how narratives are framed, legitimized, and preserved. Humor and irony play a crucial role, softening the surface while sharpening the critique, as familiar museological devices become tools for questioning authority rather than reinforcing it. The title’s double meaning underscores the work’s conceptual depth, referencing both Puerto Rico’s political status as a long-standing colony and a locally produced soft drink embedded in everyday life. This blend of the personal and the political reflects Delano’s own biography and lived experience, grounding broader historical analysis in individual memory. At the New Britain Museum of American Art, the project expands to include materials connected to Connecticut’s Puerto Rican diaspora, weaving regional stories into a global history of displacement, resistance, and cultural persistence. As the largest presentation of the project to date, this installation transforms multiple galleries into a space for reflection and dialogue. It resists closure, encouraging viewers to linger with ambiguity and reconsider what museums choose to show, and what they omit. In doing so, Delano positions art as an active form of historical inquiry—one that does not merely document the past, but interrogates how it continues to shape the present. Image: Previous Installation of 'The Museum of the Old Colony: An Art Installation by Pablo Delano'
Black Photojournalism
Amon Carter Museum of American Art | Fort Worth, TX
From March 15, 2026 to July 05, 2026
Black Photojournalism celebrates the vision, courage, and artistry of more than sixty Black photographers who transformed American visual culture between 1945 and the mid-1980s. Bringing together over 250 images, the exhibition illuminates the essential role of Black photojournalists in chronicling not only the nation’s pivotal social and political changes but also the quiet, profound moments of everyday life. Through their lenses, they captured the depth, dignity, and diversity of Black experience—stories often overlooked or misrepresented in mainstream narratives. Organized by the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, the exhibition draws from a wide network of archives and collections across the United States, including the museum’s own Charles “Teenie” Harris Archive. These photographs highlight the power and creativity of Black-owned and operated media outlets such as the Afro American News, Atlanta Daily World, Chicago Defender, Ebony, and Pittsburgh Courier. In their pages, photojournalists gave visibility to the triumphs and challenges of their communities, using photography as a form of resistance, pride, and cultural preservation. Black Photojournalism honors the photographers who documented the civil rights movement, public celebrations, neighborhood gatherings, and moments of personal strength. Their work reveals a profound understanding of photography not just as documentation but as storytelling—an art that shapes collective memory and reclaims authorship over representation. Designed by artist David Hartt and co-organized by Dan Leers and Charlene Foggie-Barnett, the exhibition embodies a collaborative spirit that bridges past and present voices. Supported by the Terra Foundation for American Art and the National Endowment for the Humanities, this landmark exhibition affirms that the legacy of Black photojournalism is not confined to history—it continues to inspire how we see, remember, and imagine the world today. Image: Charles “Teenie” Harris (1908–1998), A Pittsburgh Courier press operator, possibly William Brown, printing newspapers, possibly for a Midwestern edition, 1954, inkjet print, Carnegie Museum of Art, Heinz Family Fund, 2001.35.3136, © Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
MOMENTS IN TIME: Defining Moments in the History of Photography
Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) Jacksonville | Jacksonville, FL
From December 13, 2025 to July 05, 2026
Moments in Time: Defining Moments in the History of Photography invites viewers to explore the evolution of photography through highlights from the Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville’s permanent collection. This rotating exhibition reveals the depth and diversity of MOCA’s photographic holdings, which now encompass more than 250 works. Tracing key shifts across more than a century, the exhibition celebrates how photography has continually redefined itself—moving from documentary tool to expressive art form, and ultimately to a dynamic language of image-making that reflects our digital age. The exhibition begins in the early twentieth century, when visionaries such as Imogen Cunningham, Edward Curtis, André Kertész, and Edward Weston expanded the possibilities of the medium. Their experiments with light, form, and subject matter helped establish photography as a fine art, bridging realism and abstraction. Their work captures both the texture of daily life and the timeless beauty of composition, marking photography’s first great turning point. The journey continues through the 1970s, a decade of profound transformation when artists embraced photography as a conceptual practice. This period witnessed bold experimentation, challenging the idea of what a photograph could be and how it might communicate. The camera became not just an instrument of observation but a means of personal and political expression. The narrative then extends to the present, where digital technologies, manipulated imagery, and stylistic plurality dominate contemporary practice, reflecting the boundless visual culture of the 21st century. Complementing the museum’s collection are works on loan from local collectors and from the distinguished Sondra Gilman and Celso Gonzalez-Falla Collection. Together, these pieces form a vibrant dialogue across generations, revealing how photography continues to shape—and be shaped by—the ever-changing ways we see, remember, and define our world. Image: Lauren Jack, 'The Colonial Era (the Age of Plastic Series)', 2008, Digital C print, ed. of 20. Gift of Michael and Michele Cavendish, 2013.04.02 © Lauren Jack
Hyphen American: Intersections of Identity
Sheldon Museum of Art | Lincoln, NE
From January 24, 2026 to July 05, 2026
Hyphen American: Intersections of Identity, on view from January 24 through July 5, 2026, examines how artists navigate the layered meanings of belonging in the United States. Timed to coincide with the nation’s 250th anniversary, the exhibition resists a singular definition of “Americanness,” instead foregrounding the lived realities of identities shaped by migration, memory, language, and cultural inheritance. Through works drawn from the museum’s collection, the exhibition proposes that the hyphen is not a division, but a generative space of connection and negotiation. The artists featured in Hyphen American explore how personal histories intersect with broader social narratives. Portraiture, abstraction, documentary strategies, and symbolic forms become tools for articulating experiences of displacement, resilience, and community-building. These works reveal Americanness as something continually formed—through rituals, shared struggles, and acts of self-definition—rather than a fixed or unified ideal. By emphasizing multiplicity over assimilation, the exhibition highlights how difference itself has long been central to the American story. A distinctive feature of the project is its multilingual approach. For the first time, the Sheldon presents both the exhibition and its accompanying publication in four languages: English, Spanish, Vietnamese, and Arabic. This decision reflects the linguistic landscape of Lincoln, Nebraska, and underscores the exhibition’s commitment to accessibility and representation. Language here is more than translation; it becomes a curatorial gesture that acknowledges how meaning shifts across communities and how cultural participation expands when barriers are lowered. Curated by Christian Wurst, Hyphen American extends beyond the gallery walls through a series of public programs developed in collaboration with local community members. Their voices are woven into the exhibition and catalogue, reinforcing the idea that identity is collective as well as individual. Together, the artworks and programs position the museum as a space of dialogue—one that honors complexity, embraces contradiction, and invites viewers to reconsider what it means to see themselves, and others, as American. Image: Binh Danh. Vivian Nguyen, Environmental Studies, UNL, Class of 2014 Archival pigmented print, 2011 40 × 30 inches University of Nebraska–Lincoln, gift of the artist, U-5663.2012
People Make This Place: SFAI Stories
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art - SFMOMA | San Francisco, CA
From July 26, 2025 to July 05, 2026
Exploring moments from the rich history of the San Francisco Art Institute (SFAI) — before its closure, the West Coast’s oldest fine art school — this exhibition spotlights works by more than 50 SFAI alumni and former faculty included in the museum’s collection. The presentation underscores the school’s crucial role in fostering creativity and experimentation, featuring works across media since the post–World War II era by artists like Ansel Adams, Joan Brown, Miguel Calderón, Imogen Cunningham, Mike Henderson, Candice Lin, and Carlos Villa, among others. The exhibition also includes a dynamic and quirky range of archival materials drawn from the SFMOMA Library and the SFAI Archive. These encompass ephemera from the founding of the school’s photography department, posters for 1950s Beat-era galleries run by artist alumni, student newspapers, and flyers from the punk and new wave music scenes of the 1970s. Taking its title from a line in the final 2022 commencement speech by faculty member and alumnus Dewey Crumpler, People Make This Place is a collaborative effort across the museum in partnership with the SFAI Legacy Foundation + Archive.
Edie 66: Andy Warhol, Jerry Schatzberg, Gerard Malanga, Adam Ritchie
Ki Smith Gallery Ki Smith Gallery | New York, NY
From May 28, 2026 to July 05, 2026
Edie 66: Andy Warhol, Jerry Schatzberg, Gerard Malanga, Adam Ritchie brings together film, photography and archival images to revisit one of the most recognizable figures of 1960s New York. On view from May 28 to July 5, 2026, the exhibition centers on Warhol’s Outer and Inner Space, a rare 1966 double-projected film built around Edie Sedgwick and her own image on a television monitor. The setup remains strikingly simple and oddly modern. Sedgwick appears in conversation with a prerecorded version of herself, split across two screens so that her presence is both immediate and fragmented. The effect turned her into one of the Factory’s defining faces, while also anticipating later work in video and mediated portraiture. Warhol’s Cow wallpaper and alternate screen tests of Sedgwick extend that focus, showing how he returned again and again to repetition, surface and image-making as forms of portraiture. Jerry Schatzberg’s photographs shift the tone. Drawn from sessions in 1965 and 1966, they show Sedgwick with a more intimate sense of character, balancing glamour with vulnerability and spontaneity. Where Warhol often kept his distance, Schatzberg’s camera lingers on expression and mood. The result is a fuller picture of Sedgwick not just as a Warhol subject, but as a figure whose style and presence helped define the downtown scene around the Factory. Gerard Malanga’s photobooth images add another layer, capturing Sedgwick in a loose, playful register that reflects the improvisational energy of the circle around Warhol. Adam Ritchie’s photographs of The Velvet Underground, including material from their first Ludlow Street apartment and performances with Sedgwick and Malanga, complete the picture of a tight creative world where music, film and style moved through the same rooms. Together, the works present Sedgwick less as a myth than as a working presence inside a scene that still shapes how the 1960s are remembered. Image: Edie Sedgwick, Super Star, 1966 © Jerry Schatzberg
Nature of Nordic Woman
Isabel Sullivan Gallery | New York, NY
From June 18, 2026 to July 09, 2026
Nature of Nordic Woman at iS—G in Tribeca brings together photography, performance and conversation to examine what lies beneath the familiar image of Nordic calm. On view from June 18 to July 9, 2026, the exhibition is presented by Isabel Sullivan Gallery and developed by photographer Meeri Koutaniemi, psychologist Iida Mäkikallio and performance artist Ida-Maria Martela. The project starts from a sharp question: if Finland is repeatedly ranked among the world’s happiest countries, what does that say about the emotional lives of women living there? The exhibition does not settle for easy answers. Instead, it looks at the cost of self-suppression, and at the ways cultural expectations around composure, kindness and restraint can shape the body as much as the mind. Koutaniemi’s black-and-white photographs give the subject a direct visual frame, while Mäkikallio’s work brings a psychological reading to questions of embodiment, desire and emotional release. Martela’s performances add another layer, turning the exhibition into a live encounter rather than a static display. Together, the three practices create a setting where vulnerability is not treated as weakness, but as a site of pressure and possibility. The show’s central argument is clear: anger, eros and desire can function as forms of recovery rather than disruption. That idea gives the exhibition its edge, especially at a moment when women’s emotional labor remains widely normalized and rarely examined with this degree of specificity. The title points to a broader tension between nature as landscape and nature as condition. Nordic identity often carries associations of stillness, distance and balance, yet Nature of Nordic Woman looks at the human costs of maintaining that image. It offers a study of emotional freedom framed through photography, but rooted in psychology and performance. The result is a compact exhibition with a strong through line: not a portrait of serenity, but a closer look at what that serenity can conceal. Image: Feral, 2026 © Meeri Koutaniemi
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