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Win a Solo Exhibition in June 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!
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Carrie Mae Weems: The Usual Suspects

From May 21, 2022 to August 07, 2022
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Carrie Mae Weems: The Usual Suspects
90 Carlton Street
Athens, GA 30602
Organized by the Louisiana State University Museum of Art and curated by Courtney Taylor, Carrie Mae Weems: The Usual Suspects includes recent photographic and video works by the renowned artist questioning stereotypes that associate Black bodies with criminality. Images from her series All the Boys and The Usual Suspects implicate these stereotypes in the deaths of Black men and women at the hands of police and confront the viewer with the fact of judicial inaction. Blocks of color obscuring faces point to the constructed nature of our notions of race and how these imagined concepts obscure humanity — here with very real and deadly outcomes. “People of a Darker Hue,” a meditative compilation of video, found footage, narration and performance commemorates these deaths.

Considered one of the most influential contemporary American artists, Carrie Mae Weems has investigated family relationships, cultural identity, sexism, class, political systems and the consequences of power. Determined as ever to enter the picture — both literally and metaphorically — she has sustained an ongoing dialogue within contemporary discourse for over 30 years. During this time Weems has developed a complex body of art employing photographs, text, fabric, audio, digital images, installation and video.

In 2013, Weems received the MacArthur “Genius” grant as well as the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Lifetime Achievement Award. Weems has received numerous awards, grants and fellowships including the prestigious Prix de Roma, the National Endowment of the Arts, the Alpert, the Anonymous was a Woman and the Tiffany Awards, among many other honors.

She has participated in numerous solo and group exhibitions at major national and international museums including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Frist Center for Visual Art, Solomon Guggenheim Museum in New York and the Centro Andaluz de Arte Contemporáneo in Seville, Spain. She is represented in public and private collections around the world.
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Exhibitions Closing Soon

Balance / Repetition / Disruption
Praxis Gallery | Minneapolis, MN
From April 18, 2026 to May 09, 2026
Balance / Repetition / Disruption, on view at Praxis Gallery from April 18 through May 16, 2026, brings together a diverse selection of photographic works that examine the mechanics of visual composition. Rather than focusing on subject matter alone, the exhibition turns attention toward the underlying structures that shape how images are built, read, and experienced. The result is a thoughtful survey of how photographers engage with rhythm, order, and interruption within the frame. At the core of the exhibition lies the interplay between three fundamental forces. Balance suggests stability, a sense that elements within an image hold each other in check. Repetition introduces pattern and continuity, guiding the eye across the surface. Disruption, however, unsettles these systems, introducing breaks that challenge expectations and invite closer scrutiny. The works on display demonstrate that these elements rarely operate in isolation. Instead, they coexist, overlap, and at times contradict one another, producing images that feel both controlled and unpredictable. The photographs vary widely in approach. Some adopt a restrained visual language, relying on minimal forms and subtle tonal shifts to establish equilibrium. Others embrace density and accumulation, layering repeated motifs until patterns verge on collapse. In certain works, disruption appears as a sudden fracture—a line, a shadow, or an unexpected gesture that interrupts the visual flow. In others, it emerges more gradually, revealing tensions that were embedded in the composition from the outset. What unites the exhibition is a shared interest in composition as an evolving process rather than a fixed outcome. Each image reflects a series of decisions, adjustments, and intuitions that shape its final form. By foregrounding these dynamics, Balance / Repetition / Disruption encourages viewers to look beyond immediate impressions and consider how images function internally. In doing so, the exhibition reaffirms a fundamental aspect of photography: that meaning often resides not only in what is depicted, but in how elements are arranged, repeated, and ultimately unsettled within the frame. Image: © Geri Hanson
Multi-Exposed
Praxis Gallery | Minneapolis, MN
From April 18, 2026 to May 09, 2026
Multi-Exposed, on view at Praxis Gallery from April 18 through May 9, 2026, examines a photographic technique that challenges the notion of a single, fixed moment. By bringing together works created through both in-camera multiple exposures and digital layering, the exhibition highlights how contemporary photographers manipulate time, space, and perception within a single frame. The result is a compelling exploration of photography’s ability to move beyond straightforward representation. At its core, multiple exposure disrupts the traditional idea of the photograph as a singular slice of reality. Instead, it allows images to accumulate, merging distinct moments and viewpoints into a composite whole. In some works, this layering appears almost imperceptible, producing subtle shifts in position or light that gently alter the viewer’s sense of continuity. In others, the technique becomes more overt, with overlapping forms and fragmented figures creating dense, immersive compositions that resist immediate interpretation. The exhibition reveals how artists use this approach not only as a formal device but also as a conceptual tool. Questions of memory and identity surface repeatedly, as layered images suggest the way experiences overlap and reshape one another over time. Landscapes appear both stable and fluid, while human figures dissolve and reassemble, reflecting the complexity of perception itself. Movement, too, plays a central role, with sequences compressed into a single image that conveys duration rather than a frozen instant. Despite the diversity of styles, a shared sensibility emerges. Whether minimal or intricate, each work engages with the tension between clarity and ambiguity. The viewer is invited to navigate these images slowly, tracing connections between layers and considering how meaning unfolds across them. In this way, Multi-Exposed positions photography as a medium capable of holding multiple realities at once. By foregrounding the creative possibilities of layering, the exhibition underscores a broader shift in photographic practice—one that embraces complexity and acknowledges that experience rarely exists in isolation, but rather in overlapping fragments that continuously reshape how we see. Image: © Ian Trask
Abelardo Morell: Ideas of Order
Krakow Witkin Gallery | Boston, MA
From March 21, 2026 to May 09, 2026
Abelardo Morell: Ideas of Order, presented at Krakow Witkin Gallery from March 21 to May 9, 2026, offers a concentrated exploration of the artist’s recent investigations into perception, illusion, and the quiet transformation of everyday materials. Known for his ability to render the familiar uncanny, Abelardo Morell approaches the studio as a site of experimentation where light, scale, and surface become tools for reimagining reality. Across the works gathered in this exhibition, ordinary objects shift into enigmatic presences. Pages, glass, paper, and wood lose their utilitarian identity and instead function as elements in carefully orchestrated visual constructions. Morell’s long-standing fascination with optical phenomena continues here, yet these photographs feel increasingly introspective, rooted in the act of looking itself. Reflections, distortions, and shadows introduce subtle disruptions, inviting viewers to reconsider how images are formed and understood. Several pieces draw directly from art history, engaging in a quiet dialogue with classical still life painting. Reproductions of historical imagery are reframed and mediated through layers of glass or print, emphasizing both their material fragility and their distance from an original source. This interplay between reproduction and authenticity underscores a recurring concern in Morell’s practice: the instability of images and the ways in which meaning shifts through context and scale. In other works, abstraction emerges from the meticulous observation of small details. Enlarged textures resemble vast landscapes, while simple arrangements of flat surfaces generate complex spatial illusions. These photographs suggest that wonder does not reside in rare or exotic subjects, but in the careful attention paid to what is already at hand. The camera becomes a means of discovery rather than documentation. Ideas of Order reflects a mature phase in Morell’s career, where decades of technical mastery support a deeply poetic inquiry into vision and representation. His images remain grounded in the physical world, yet they open onto spaces of ambiguity and imagination, where perception itself becomes the subject. Image: Abelardo Morell Dictionary Thumb Indices 2025 Color photograph © Abelardo Morell, courtesy of Krakow Witkin Gallery
Aneta Grzeszykowska: Daughter
Lyles & King Gallery | New York, NY
From April 10, 2026 to May 09, 2026
The conceptual boundaries of family portraiture and biological identity undergo a clinical examination in Aneta Grzeszykowska’s latest series, Daughter, appearing at Lyles & King from April 10 through May 9, 2026. Grzeszykowska, a prominent figure in the Polish avant-garde, continues her long-standing inquiry into the erasure and construction of the self. This body of work arrives twenty-one years after her seminal Album (2005), in which she digitally removed her own image from hundreds of family photographs. In this new cycle, the artist utilizes a hyperrealistic mask of her younger self to navigate the psychological shift occurring as her own daughter enters adolescence. The project functions as a "vivisection" of domestic roles, blurring the chronological distinctions between mother and child through a series of highly staged, unsettling tableaus. The exhibition draws significant influence from the biological phenomenon of feto-maternal microchimerism, the process by which fetal cells migrate to the mother’s body and persist for decades. Grzeszykowska interprets this cellular exchange as a material basis for a fractured personhood, where the mother exists as a vessel for both her progenitor and her offspring simultaneously. By donning a mask that replicates her features at age fourteen, the artist creates a visual paradox: an adult body inhabiting the face of a child. This artifice allows her to inhabit the role of her daughter’s peer or alter ego, yet the physical opacity of the mask creates a literal barrier. The performance results in a profound sense of detachment, where the only figure capable of recognizing the artist beneath the prosthetic layer is her own mother, whose embrace serves as the sole anchor to the past. Grzeszykowska’s compositions frequently mimic the aesthetic tropes of idealized vacation photography found on contemporary social media platforms. However, the technical perfection of the lighting and the natural settings is punctured by a lingering sense of ontological horror. The silence within the frames suggests a rupture between social performance and the "crawling anxiety" of aging. As a woman’s societal value often remains tethered to transient standards of youth, the artist captures the futile pursuit of a lost self. Currently featured in the New Humans exhibition at the New Museum, Grzeszykowska’s work remains a vital critique of how identity is perceived, performed, and eventually surrendered within the architecture of the family unit. Through these meticulous stagings, she exposes the discontinuity of human existence, proving that the labor of care eventually leads to a total reversal of roles. Image: Aneta Grzeszykowska, DAUGHTER #6, 2025 © Aneta Grzeszykowska, courtesy of the Lyles & King Gallery
Sabiha Çimen and Mary Ellen Mark: The Girls
Howard Greenberg Gallery | New York, NY
From April 02, 2026 to May 09, 2026
Sabiha Çimen and Mary Ellen Mark: The Girls brings together two distinct yet deeply resonant photographic voices at Howard Greenberg Gallery from April 2 to May 9, 2026. Though separated by generation and geography, both artists turn their attention toward the intimate, often overlooked terrain of girlhood. The exhibition unfolds as a quiet dialogue across time, where images echo one another in their sensitivity to moments of play, introspection, and transformation. Mary Ellen Mark’s work, spanning decades and continents, carries a profound commitment to those living on the margins. Her black-and-white photographs reveal a sharp attentiveness to gesture and expression, whether capturing the defiant energy of teenagers in Streetwise, the fragile realities of institutional life in Ward 81, or the performative rituals of adolescence in her series on American proms. Across these varied settings, her portraits resist spectacle, instead offering a nuanced view into the emotional lives of her subjects. In contrast, Sabiha Çimen’s images unfold in soft, luminous color, drawing viewers into the interior world of girls attending Qur’an schools in Turkey. Her series Hafiz blends documentary observation with a dreamlike sensibility, where everyday routines become infused with imagination and quiet humor. The girls she photographs appear at ease, moving between discipline and play, their friendships and private moments rendered with a sense of closeness that feels both tender and unguarded. A subtle thread connects the two photographers through an unexpected story: a girl named Emine, photographed by Mark in 1965 and later found decades on by Çimen. This encounter bridges past and present, underscoring how a single image can extend beyond its moment, shaping memory and meaning over time. Within the exhibition, such connections deepen the sense that girlhood, while shaped by context, carries shared emotional textures. Together, these works trace a space where vulnerability meets resilience, and where identity takes form in fleeting, formative moments. The exhibition lingers in that delicate threshold, inviting viewers to consider how girls see themselves, and how they are seen in return. Image: Students having fun at an artificial lake during a weekend event, Istanbul, 2018 Archival pigment print mounted on Alu Dibond © Sabiha Çimen, Courtesy of Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York
Amir Zaki: No Dust to Settle
Diane Rosenstein Fine Art | Los Angeles, CA
From April 04, 2026 to May 09, 2026
Amir Zaki: No Dust to Settle marks the debut of Diane Rosenstein Gallery’s new Hollywood space and offers a compelling look at California’s modernist past through the lens of one of its most meticulous photographers. The exhibition gathers fifteen new black-and-white images of postwar public libraries across Orange County, photographed by Amir Zaki, who has spent nearly three decades studying how California’s architecture expresses both idealism and dislocation. Zaki’s imagery centers on mid-century library buildings designed by icons such as Richard Neutra and William Pereira. What makes this series distinct is what it leaves out: every trace of readable text. Removing signage, titles, and legible markings, Zaki constructs sterile yet poetic tableaux where architecture becomes mute. This act of erasure shifts the viewer’s attention toward proportion, texture, and structure, turning the library into a silent sculpture—a paradoxical monument to language without language. The photographs evoke Southern California’s civic optimism of the 1950s and 1960s while acknowledging how those ideals have since eroded. Once public sanctuaries for learning, these libraries now stand as relics in transition, their relevance contested in an era of digital information. Zaki’s cool precision—capturing glass, shadow, and concrete with near-clinical distance—draws out both their beauty and abandonment. Born in Beaumont and now based in Huntington Beach, Zaki has exhibited widely, including at the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. His continuing focus on the state’s built and natural environments underscores his interest in how memory embeds itself in place. In No Dust to Settle, his lens documents not just the architecture of learning, but the cultural shift that leaves knowledge itself floating in suspension. Image: Amir Zaki, "San Juan Capistrano Library, #1", 2025. © Amir Zaki
Helmut Newton x Steven Klein on the dark side
Staley-Wise Gallery | New York, NY
From March 19, 2026 to May 09, 2026
Helmut Newton x Steven Klein: on the dark side, presented at Staley-Wise Gallery from March 19 through May 2, 2026, brings together the work of two photographers whose images redefine the visual language of fashion. Through a selection of striking photographs, the exhibition places the work of Helmut Newton in dialogue with that of Steven Klein, revealing how both artists explore glamour, sexuality, power, and performance with fearless intensity. Their images move beyond the conventions of editorial photography, constructing cinematic scenes where elegance and provocation coexist. Helmut Newton emerges as one of the most influential fashion photographers of the late twentieth century. Born in Berlin in 1920, he begins his career assisting the photographer Yva before leaving Germany as the political climate darkens in the late 1930s. After settling in Australia, Newton develops a distinctive photographic voice that eventually finds an international stage in fashion magazines such as Vogue. His images from the 1970s and 1980s challenge expectations of fashion imagery through bold compositions, dramatic lighting, and narratives that openly address themes of authority, desire, and theatricality. Decades later, Steven Klein emerges as a major figure in contemporary image-making, continuing a similarly audacious approach while reflecting the evolving aesthetics of modern culture. Educated at the Rhode Island School of Design, Klein initially studies painting before turning fully toward photography in the 1990s. His work becomes widely recognized for its stylized visual storytelling and collaborations with leading figures in fashion, music, and cinema. Through editorial commissions and advertising campaigns, Klein constructs images that blend surreal narrative, psychological tension, and high-fashion spectacle. Seen together, the photographs reveal a shared fascination with the theatrical potential of the camera. Models appear as protagonists within carefully staged environments where luxury, fantasy, and danger intertwine. Humor and irony frequently surface within these compositions, offsetting their darker undertones. By placing the work of Newton and Klein side by side, the exhibition highlights how fashion photography evolves across generations while maintaining a powerful capacity to challenge social conventions and expand the boundaries of visual storytelling. Image: Helmut Newton Woman examining man, Calvin Klein, American VOGUE, Saint-Tropez, 1975 (© Helmut Newton Foundation)
Orange Crush
Gray Loft Gallery | Jingletown, Oakland, CA
From March 14, 2026 to May 09, 2026
Orange Crush, on view from March 14 through May 9, 2026 at Gray Loft Gallery, celebrates the expressive potential of a single color through a vibrant juried photography exhibition. Now in its eighth edition, the annual show invites photographers to explore the symbolic and visual power of orange across a wide range of photographic approaches. The result is an energetic collection of contemporary images that reveal how a single hue can evoke warmth, urgency, playfulness, and reflection. Presented in partnership with the regional photography festival PhotoCarmel, the exhibition features work by eighty photographers from across the San Francisco Bay Area. Juried by Ann Jastrab, Executive Director of the Center for Photographic Art, alongside gallery founder Jan Watten, the selection reflects a broad spectrum of artistic practices. Participants interpret the theme through traditional color photography, experimental techniques, mixed media works, and hand-colored images, each contributing a distinct visual perspective. The color orange carries a complex set of associations within visual culture. It appears in nature through autumn leaves, sunsets, and desert landscapes, while also functioning as a bold signal in urban environments, signage, and contemporary design. The photographs in Orange Crush explore this wide symbolic range. Some images emphasize the warmth and luminosity of the color, while others highlight its intensity or ambiguity. In many cases, the color becomes the central narrative element, guiding the viewer’s attention through striking contrasts, unexpected textures, or carefully balanced compositions. Beyond its thematic focus, the exhibition also celebrates the vitality of the Bay Area photography community. By bringing together established artists and emerging voices, the show reflects the collaborative spirit that has long defined the region’s creative landscape. Within the intimate setting of Gray Loft Gallery, Orange Crush invites visitors to experience photography as both visual exploration and sensory encounter, where a single color becomes the catalyst for a wide range of artistic interpretations and emotional responses.
Carrie Mae Weems: Something Grander Still
Art Galleries at Black Studies, UT Austin | Austin, TX
From January 30, 2026 to May 09, 2026
Carrie Mae Weems: Something Grander Still is presented at the Art Galleries at Black Studies at the University of Texas at Austin from January 30 through May 9, 2026. Centered in the Christian-Green Gallery, the exhibition revisits Family Pictures and Stories (1978–84), the foundational body of work through which Carrie Mae Weems first articulated her enduring concerns with self-definition, memory, and power. Drawn from photographs, text, and audio rooted in her own family archive, the installation traces how these early images continue to inform her evolving practice. The title, borrowed from Weems’s 1984 artist statement, underscores her conviction that understanding how we construct personal history is itself a profound creative act. Rather than staging a retrospective, the exhibition follows the afterlives of these pictures across decades of artistic and intellectual exchange. Family photographs—among them the tintype of her maternal grandfather—appear not as static relics but as active agents in an ongoing inquiry. Weems’s work moves between intimacy and structural critique, linking domestic interiors to broader histories of race, labor, and representation in the United States. Through careful sequencing of image and text, she reveals how personal narrative intersects with institutional power, insisting that private memory carries public consequence. A complementary study room in the Idea Lab expands this dialogue, situating Weems within conversations among Black photographers, feminist thinkers, and media activists of the 1980s and early 1990s. Works by contemporaries who challenged dominant visual paradigms appear alongside publications and archival materials, illuminating the cultural landscape in which her practice took shape. Photography and video emerge here as tools of resistance—means of countering erasure and reframing visibility. Across more than four decades, Weems has built a multidisciplinary oeuvre spanning photography, installation, and film, earning recognition from institutions including the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Guggenheim Museum. Yet Something Grander Still emphasizes process over accolade. By returning deliberately to formative material, the exhibition proposes revisitation as method: a way to deepen research, refine questions, and claim authority over one’s own story. In doing so, it affirms the enduring power of images to shape how history is known—and who has the right to tell it. Image: Carrie Mae Weems, Van and Vera with kids in the kitchen, from Family Pictures and Stories, 1978-84. Gelatin silver print, size variable. Courtesy the artist and Gladstone Gallery © Carrie Mae Weems
Insistent Presence: Contemporary African Art from the Chazen Collection
The Palmer Museum of Art | University Park, PA
From February 07, 2026 to May 10, 2026
Insistent Presence: Contemporary African Art from the Chazen Collection, on view from February 7 to May 10, 2026, presents a compelling exploration of the human figure as a site of memory, resistance, and imagination. Spanning sculpture, painting, ceramics, printmaking, and photography, the exhibition brings together forty works by twenty-two artists whose practices reflect both lived experience and broader social realities. Across diverse visual languages, the artists assert the figure as a powerful means of addressing history, identity, and spiritual continuity in an ever-shifting contemporary world. The exhibition unfolds through three thematic sections that consider how the body is represented, implied, or deliberately withheld. “The Body in Society” examines how individuals exist within collective structures, revealing how proximity, isolation, and shared space shape personal and political identity. “The Artist is Present” turns inward, foregrounding artists who use their own bodies as tools of inquiry, performance, and testimony. In contrast, “The Absent Body” removes figuration entirely, inviting viewers to sense human presence through objects, clothing, and symbolic traces that evoke what is unseen but deeply felt. Artists represented come from across the African continent and its global diaspora, including voices connected to Tunisia, Egypt, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, Senegal, Ghana, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and beyond. Despite the diversity of materials and approaches, the works share a commitment to affirming humanity in the face of political instability, colonial legacies, and social transformation. Emotional intimacy coexists with sharp critique, allowing everyday gestures, rituals, and expressions to carry broader cultural and historical weight. Drawn from the Chazen Museum of Art’s Contemporary African Art Initiative, the exhibition reflects a sustained effort to deepen the understanding of modern and contemporary African artistic production. By foregrounding the figure—whether visibly present or subtly implied—Insistent Presence encourages reflection on how bodies carry memory, belief, and resilience. The exhibition ultimately invites viewers to reconsider their own relationships to identity, community, and the shared human condition, emphasizing presence not as something static, but as something continually asserted and reimagined. Image: Nana Yaw Oduro (Ghanaian, b. 1994) PHILIP, 2019, inkjet print, 19-5/8 x 29-1/2 inches. Sara Guyer and Scott Straus Contemporary African Art Initiative made possible by the Straus Family Foundation, 2021.28.3 © Nana Yaw Oduro
Modern Women / Modern Vision: Photographs from the Bank of America Collection
Hudson River Museum | Yonkers, NY
From January 30, 2026 to May 10, 2026
Modern Women / Modern Vision: Photographs from the Bank of America Collection, on view at the Hudson River Museum from January 30 through May 10, 2026, offers a sweeping exploration of photography through the eyes of women who helped shape the medium from its earliest moments to the present day. Featuring nearly one hundred works, the exhibition foregrounds photography as a site of innovation, resistance, and self-determination, revealing how women consistently expanded the boundaries of visual culture across generations and continents. Organized into six thematic sections, the exhibition traces photography’s evolution alongside major social and historical shifts. From early modernist experimentation to the urgency of documentary work during the New Deal era, and from the collective activism of the Photo League to contemporary global perspectives, these photographs reveal how women used the camera to interpret—and often challenge—the world around them. Their images do more than record events; they propose new ways of seeing, questioning dominant narratives and redefining whose stories are worthy of attention. Throughout the twentieth century, women photographers navigated rapidly changing social landscapes, using photography as both a creative outlet and a means of independence. Many forged professional paths in the face of systemic barriers, pursuing subjects overlooked or dismissed by their male counterparts. Their work encompasses intimate portraits, experimental self-representation, political critique, environmental studies, and deeply human documentary projects, demonstrating an extraordinary range of approaches unified by curiosity, rigor, and vision. The exhibition brings together iconic figures and lesser-known voices, placing celebrated images into dialogue with works that deserve renewed recognition. Familiar photographs gain new resonance when viewed within broader historical and thematic contexts, while contemporary works underscore the ongoing vitality of women’s contributions to photography. Across styles that range from formal precision to emotional immediacy, these images reflect shifting ideas of identity, power, place, and representation. Modern Women / Modern Vision ultimately affirms photography as a medium profoundly shaped by women’s perspectives. By highlighting their enduring influence, the exhibition invites viewers to reconsider the history of photography not as a linear progression dominated by a few names, but as a complex, evolving conversation enriched by diverse experiences and bold acts of looking. Image: Dorothea Lange (American, 1895–1965). Child and Her Mother, Wapato, Yakima Valley, Washington, 1939. Gelatin silver print. Bank of America Collection. © Dorothea Lange
Improper Frames
Cleveland Print Room | Cleveland, OH
From February 14, 2026 to May 10, 2026
On view from February 14 through May 10, Improper Frames gathers artists who probe the unstable edges of Cleveland’s built environment, tracing the fault lines between documentation and lived experience. Organized by Cleveland Print Room and curated by Theodossis Issaias, the exhibition unfolds as a response to the city’s recently completed property inventory—an exhaustive survey that catalogues parcels and structures with bureaucratic precision. While such inventories promise clarity and order, the works presented here reveal what slips through official grids: memory, improvisation, and the quiet negotiations that shape daily life. Cleveland, long defined by cycles of industrial growth and contraction, has seen its neighborhoods reclassified and revalued through shifting policies and redevelopment plans. Against this backdrop, the participating artists approach the survey not as a neutral tool, but as a framing device that determines which stories are legible. Trees extend across invisible property lines, disregarding cadastral borders. Photographic assemblages collect fragments of testimony and architecture, layering them into provisional wholes. Dust accumulates inside a home, becoming an unintended archive—an index of presence that no municipal ledger records. The exhibition features Amber Ford, Jon Gott, Michael Indriolo, Da’Shaunae Marisa, Vivica Satterwhite, and Alejandro Vergara, each developing projects through sustained engagement with Cleveland’s evolving terrain. Their practices move between photography, installation, and spatial intervention, suggesting that the city is less a fixed map than a series of overlapping frames. Improvised structures rise in vacant lots; partial views hint at lives unfolding just beyond the picture’s edge. These gestures resist the clean boundaries of classification, proposing instead a layered understanding of place. Improper Frames ultimately questions who has the authority to define a neighborhood’s limits and future. By foregrounding what is provisional, obscured, or unruly, the exhibition invites viewers to reconsider the city not as a completed survey, but as a living composition—one continually revised by those who inhabit it. Image: Private Property Tree—West Boulevard, part of Momentary Grounds, 2025. | Alejandro Vergara. Courtesy of the artist
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