(Re)Constructing History invites viewers to consider how photographs do more than capture fleeting moments—they also carry the weight of histories that continue to shape the present. Taking its title from
Carrie Mae Weems’s powerful series
Constructing History, the exhibition encourages reflection on how images can both document and reinterpret the narratives that define our collective memory. Through the lens of contemporary photography, the show reveals how the past remains alive within every frame, layered into the visual and emotional fabric of today’s world.
Spread across three galleries, the exhibition unfolds as a journey through time, power, and representation. The first gallery turns its gaze toward Wall Street, a longstanding emblem of American ambition and authority. Here, photographs old and new reveal how the imagery of finance and architecture has served to both glorify and critique national ideals. The second gallery presents artists who reimagine and reclaim visual traditions, transforming inherited imagery through acts of reference, appropriation, and subversion. Their work asks how the repetition of images—when reworked with intention—can shift meaning and open new spaces for cultural dialogue.
The final gallery explores the capacity of photography to uncover the invisible forces that shape landscapes and social environments. From the erosion of natural sites to the evolution of urban structures, these works make visible the continuous process of change and reconstruction.
At the heart of this installation are contemporary Black artists such as Nona Faustine, Carla Williams,
Dawoud Bey, and Carrie Mae Weems, whose practices challenge the boundaries between history and imagination. Their images transcend the role of mere documentation, offering poetic and political reinterpretations of the past. Through their vision,
(Re)Constructing History becomes an invitation to see photography not as static memory, but as an ongoing act of reimagining what has been and what might yet be.
Image:
Carla Williams, Side (detail), from the series How to Read Character, 1990, printed 2024; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Accessions Committee purchase, by exchange, through a gift of Michael D. Abrams; © Carla Williams