Persona: Photography and the Re-Imagined Self, on view at Hostetter Gallery from February 19 to May 10, 2026, examines how artists have long used photography to step outside themselves and become someone—or something—else. Spanning more than a century, the exhibition traces a lineage of photographic self-transformation that reflects shifting ideas of identity, freedom, and representation. At its core is a simple but powerful proposition: the self is not fixed, and the camera can be a tool for reinvention.
Since the early twentieth century, photographers have adopted alter egos as a way to test social boundaries and challenge inherited roles. Some personas emerge through disguise, costume, or makeup, while others are constructed through performance, ritual, or digital manipulation. Whether subtle or theatrical, these transformations allow artists to question how identity is shaped by gender, race, nationality, class, and desire. By presenting themselves as avatars, icons, or imagined doubles, they expose the fragile line between who we are and who we are expected to be.
The works gathered in
Persona range from playful experiments to deeply political statements. Historical figures converse with contemporary voices, revealing how strategies of masking, role-playing, and self-staging have evolved alongside photographic technology. Time collapses as artists borrow from mythology, popular culture, and future speculation, bending reality to create spaces where new selves can briefly exist. In these images, humor and provocation often coexist with vulnerability, inviting viewers to reflect on their own assumptions about authenticity and truth.
More than a survey of artistic practices, the exhibition functions as an invitation. By witnessing acts of transformation, viewers are encouraged to imagine alternative versions of themselves and to consider identity as fluid rather than prescribed.
Persona: Photography and the Re-Imagined Self suggests that reinvention is not an escape from reality, but a means of expanding it—opening room for empathy, creativity, and the possibility of becoming otherwise.
Image:
Photo courtesy of the artist and Yossi Milo, New York
Samuel Fosso (Cameroonian), Self-Portrait (Angela Davis) from African Spirits series, 2008. Ilford Fiberbased Glossy Paper, 101.5 x 76 cm (40 x 30 in) © Samuel Fosso