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Making a Life in Photography: Rollie McKenna offers the first comprehensive survey of the remarkable career of Rosalie (Rollie) Thorne McKenna, on view at the Center for Creative Photography from January 31 to May 16, 2026. Spanning decades of work, the exhibition brings long-overdue recognition to an artist whose photographs quietly shaped American modernism while remaining largely outside the spotlight. Through architecture, portraiture, and documentary images, McKenna’s work reveals a photographer deeply attuned to form, intellect, and lived experience.
After graduating from Vassar College in 1940, McKenna forged an independent path as a professional photographer at a time when few women were able to do so. She became widely respected for her architectural photography, capturing modern buildings with a clarity and sensitivity that emphasized structure, rhythm, and human scale. Her images were included in influential publications and exhibitions, notably the Museum of Modern Art’s landmark 1955 exhibition on Latin American architecture, placing her work within an international dialogue on modern design and visual culture.
Equally compelling are McKenna’s portraits, which form an extraordinary record of twentieth-century literary and artistic life. She photographed writers, poets, and artists not as distant icons, but as thoughtful, complex individuals. Her portraits of figures such as W. H. Auden, Elizabeth Bishop, Truman Capote, Sylvia Plath, and Henry Moore convey an uncommon intimacy, shaped by trust and intellectual kinship. McKenna’s camera becomes a tool of encounter, revealing inner lives through gesture, posture, and gaze rather than theatrical pose.
More than a retrospective,
Making a Life in Photography frames McKenna’s practice as a means of personal and creative self-determination. Photography allowed her to navigate professional ambition, independence, and emotional depth in mid-twentieth-century America. This exhibition illuminates a body of work that is rigorous yet humane, modern yet deeply personal, offering a fuller understanding of an artist who used photography not only to document the world around her, but to actively shape a life of curiosity, freedom, and sustained creative purpose.
Image:
Rollie McKenna, "Lever House, New York City," 1956, Gelatin silver print, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Gift of the artist, 1987.53.105. © The Rosalie Thorne McKenna Foundation, Courtesy Center for Creative Photography, The University of Arizona Foundation