Selections from the Photography Collection: Textiles on Film, on view at the Fuller Gallery at the Allentown Art Museum from March 14 through September 6, 2026, offers a richly textured exploration of photography’s long engagement with fabric, clothing, and adornment. Drawn from the museum’s permanent collection, this installation highlights how photographers have used textiles not only as visual subjects, but as expressive surfaces through which identity, labor, and daily life are revealed. The exhibition unfolds as a meditation on touch, pattern, and material presence within the photographic frame.
Textiles on Film brings together works that examine cloth from multiple vantage points, moving fluidly between still life, portraiture, documentary, and abstraction. In some images, fabric becomes a formal element—folded, layered, or illuminated to emphasize rhythm and texture. In others, it is inseparable from the human body, signaling personal style, cultural belonging, or economic condition. Garments worn in public streets, uniforms shaped by industry, and handmade pieces crafted in domestic spaces all speak to the ways textiles mediate between the private and the social worlds.
The exhibition also foregrounds processes of making and repair, revealing textiles as products of both skill and endurance. Photographs tracing wool from raw fiber to finished cloth sit alongside scenes of factory production, where speed and repetition define the working environment. More intimate images of sewing, mending, and home labor offer a counterpoint, emphasizing care, continuity, and resilience. Across these varied approaches, textiles emerge as quiet witnesses to human ingenuity and persistence, bearing the marks of use, time, and touch.
By presenting works by artists such as
Danny Lyon,
Robert Doisneau,
Garry Winogrand, Judith Taylor, and Charlee Mae Brodsky,
Selections from the Photography Collection: Textiles on Film underscores the breadth of photographic responses to fabric as subject and symbol. Together, these photographs invite viewers to look closely at materials often taken for granted, revealing how threads, seams, and surfaces can carry stories of creativity, labor, and self-expression across generations and communities.
Image:
Danny Lyon (American, b. 1942), Rosebud Reservation, Parmalee, South Dakota (detail), 2000, gelatin silver print. Gift of Jon and Nicky Ungar, 2018. © Danny Lyon