Between Seeing and Feeling explores the profound relationship between vision and touch, revealing how photography can capture the essence of human emotion through more than sight alone. Drawing from the California Museum of Photography’s permanent collection, the exhibition presents over thirty photographs by artists such as
Graciela Iturbide,
Vivian Maier, Kenji Nakahashi, and Catherine Opie. Together, their works trace a tactile history of the medium, where the act of seeing becomes inseparable from the act of feeling.
Though photography is often considered a visual art, the selected works challenge this assumption by emphasizing the sensory depth inherent in images. Textures, gestures, and physical presence echo through each frame, suggesting warmth, vulnerability, and connection. The exhibition is inspired by the idea of the
haptic turn—a growing awareness of how art engages all the senses, not only the eyes. Here, photographs become almost tangible, inviting the viewer to sense the weight of a hand, the softness of skin, or the quiet energy of a shared space.
In this context, touch emerges as both subject and metaphor. It represents the intimacy between photographer and subject, as well as the emotional contact forged between image and audience. Through this lens, the works in
Between Seeing and Feeling evoke movement, sound, and empathy, extending photography’s boundaries beyond its flat surface.
Organized in the wake of a global pandemic—a time when physical connection became limited—the exhibition offers a meditation on distance and closeness, absence and presence. It invites viewers to reconsider the emotional capacity of photography, reminding us that images can reach us not only through our eyes but also through our sense of touch. In bridging the gap between vision and sensation, these photographs reveal what it truly means to feel an image.
Image:
Kenji Nakahashi, Memory (Saye’s Memory), 1985. Collection of the California Museum of Photography/UCR ARTS, anonymous gift in memory of Kenji Nakahashi. © Center for Creative Photography, Arizona Board of Regents.