Diane Arbus: Sanctum Sanctorum, on view at Fraenkel Gallery from March 12 to May 22, 2026, gathers forty-five photographs made between 1961 and 1971 in spaces defined by privacy and trust. The title refers to a sacred inner room, a place not meant for casual entry, and the exhibition reflects Arbus’s rare ability to be welcomed into such environments. Bedrooms, homes, trailers, and personal interiors become sites of encounter, where the presence of the camera is neither concealed nor disruptive, but openly acknowledged and quietly accepted.
Arbus’s photographs reveal moments shaped by mutual recognition rather than observation from a distance. Her subjects meet the lens with candor, curiosity, or resolve, offering themselves without performance or apology. Whether depicting well-known figures or anonymous individuals, the images resist hierarchy and spectacle. Arbus’s interest was never in classification, but in attention—allowing each person to exist fully within the frame. The intimacy of these settings amplifies that exchange, making the viewer aware of the delicate balance between vulnerability and self-possession.
The exhibition brings together both celebrated and lesser-known works, encouraging a reconsideration of images long embedded in photographic history. Seen within this focused context, familiar photographs open onto new emotional registers, while rarely exhibited works extend the scope of Arbus’s vision. Across the series, private spaces become psychological landscapes, revealing how identity, desire, and difference are shaped within domestic and personal realms. These interiors are not merely backgrounds, but active participants in the relationships Arbus forged with those she photographed.
Following recent international presentations that reassessed Arbus’s legacy,
Sanctum Sanctorum offers a quieter, more concentrated perspective on her work. It underscores her enduring relevance as an artist who approached photography as an act of encounter—one grounded in curiosity, respect, and moral clarity. Rather than exposing secrets, these photographs honor the complexity of being seen, reminding viewers that intimacy in art is not taken, but given.
Image:
Brenda Diana Duff Frazier, 1938 Debutante of the Year, at home, Boston, Mass. 1966
gelatin silver print, 20 x 16 inches (sheet) [50.8 x 40.6 cm] © Diane Arbus