Time Travelers: Photographs from the Gayle Greenhill Collection invites viewers to journey through photography’s rich and evolving history, exploring how images can transport us across time, place, and imagination. Each photograph on view functions as both a document and a dream—an open doorway into the moments, ideas, and emotions that have defined the medium since its inception. From its earliest experiments to contemporary visions, the exhibition offers a meditation on photography’s enduring power to connect us to worlds both real and imagined.
Spanning nearly two centuries, the selection traces photography’s transformation from scientific innovation to expressive art form.
William Henry Fox Talbot’s pioneering studies of light and shadow meet the ethereal portraits of
Julia Margaret Cameron, while
Edward Steichen’s atmospheric compositions reveal the painterly potential of the camera. Works by
László Moholy-Nagy and Jan Groover push the boundaries of perception, using abstraction to question how we see and what we know. Meanwhile, JoAnn Verburg’s immersive landscapes invite viewers into spaces where time seems to expand and dissolve, offering quiet moments of reflection within nature’s rhythm.
The photographs presented here—ranging from portraits and landscapes to experimental and documentary works—demonstrate the many ways artists have used the camera to observe, interpret, and invent the world around them. Each image holds a conversation between the past and the present, between the photographer’s vision and the viewer’s imagination.
Honoring a generous gift from Robert F. Greenhill to The Museum of Modern Art in memory of his wife, Gayle Greenhill,
Time Travelers celebrates a life lived through art and the enduring human desire to reach beyond the moment. As photographer
Emmet Gowin once reflected, “For me, pictures provide a means of holding, intensely, a moment of communication between one human and another.”
Image:
Tod Papageorge. Central Park. 1989. Gelatin silver print, 15 5/16 × 22 13/16" (38.9 x 57.9 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Gayle Greenhill Collection. © 2025 Tod Papageorge