Hujar: Contact offers an intimate and revealing journey through the life and artistic process of
Peter Hujar, one of the most compelling photographers of the twentieth century. Featuring over 110 contact sheets and 20 large-scale prints drawn from the Morgan Library’s extensive Peter Hujar Collection, the exhibition opens a rare window into the artist’s creative mind.
Hujar, born in 1934, began organizing his contact sheets with methodical precision when he was just twenty-one years old. This practice, continued throughout his life, forms a visual diary that traces his evolution from a young studio assistant in the mid-1950s to an independent and celebrated photographer in the vibrant East Village art scene of the 1970s and 1980s. Each sheet documents his curiosity, technical experimentation, and emotional sensitivity to the human form and spirit.
The exhibition captures the breadth of Hujar’s career—from his early commercial and fashion work to his deeply personal portraits of friends, lovers, and artists. His contact sheets, often marked with lines, circles, and notes, expose the photographer’s decision-making process: the frames he favored, the compositions he discarded, and the subtleties of gesture and light that guided his selections. These visual traces bring viewers closer to the moment of creation, revealing how instinct, empathy, and discipline converged in his practice.
Beyond their technical fascination, Hujar’s images convey an extraordinary emotional range. They reflect not only his growth as an artist but also the transformation of the cultural landscape surrounding him—from the optimism of postwar New York to the raw, bohemian energy of downtown life. Through these contact sheets,
Hujar: Contact becomes a portrait of an era, a meditation on artistic devotion, and a celebration of photography’s power to capture both presence and passage.
Contact sheet:
Susan Sontag. Peter Hujar Collection, Morgan Library & Museum, New York, purchased on the Charina Endowment Fund, 2013, 2013.108:8.2310. © The Peter Hujar Archive / Artists Rights Society (ARS).