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Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body, on view from January 24 to June 28, 2026 at the Norton Photography Gallery of the Phoenix Art Museum, brings together a compelling selection of photographs that examine the human body as both subject and archive. Drawing primarily from the collections of the Center for Creative Photography and the Phoenix Art Museum, the exhibition traces how photographers across generations have approached the body as a site of movement, endurance, vulnerability, and transformation.
Rather than presenting an idealized figure, the works in
Muscle Memory emphasize physical experience and lived reality. Bodies are shown in motion and at rest, shaped by time, labor, sport, illness, and aging. Through documentary, conceptual, and abstract approaches, the exhibition reveals how photography has long been used to grapple with form, beauty, and physical presence, while also engaging with the social and political meanings projected onto bodies in both urban and natural environments.
A central theme of the exhibition is the idea of memory held within the body itself. Muscles, posture, and gesture become visual records of experience, carrying traces of repetition, discipline, and adaptation. Photographs of athletes and performers sit alongside images that explore disability and aging, inviting viewers to consider strength and fragility not as opposites, but as interconnected states. In more abstract works, the body dissolves into shape and rhythm, pushing photography toward a language that evokes sensation rather than description.
By placing historical and contemporary works in dialogue,
Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body highlights how evolving photographic practices reflect changing attitudes toward physicality and identity. The exhibition underscores photography’s ability to capture not only what bodies look like, but what they have endured, learned, and remembered. Co-organized by Phoenix Art Museum and the Center for Creative Photography and curated by Emilia Mickevicius, the exhibition offers a thoughtful and expansive meditation on the body as an ever-changing landscape, shaped by time, experience, and the persistent act of living.
Image:
Terrell Groggins, "Gabriels and Shields Square Up Round 1," 2018, printed 2021. Inkjet print. Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona: Center for Creative Photography Photojournalism Fund, 2021.01.06. © Terrell Groggins My Art My Rules