1045 Marine Dr.
The Photographic Nude 2026 returns to LightBox Photographic Gallery in Astoria, Oregon, from February 14 through March 11, 2026, presenting a juried selection of work by twenty-seven photographers from across the United States. This annual exhibition offers a thoughtful exploration of the human form, embracing photography’s long-standing engagement with the nude as both subject and symbol. The exhibition opens with an artist’s reception on Saturday, February 14, from 4 to 7 pm, inviting the public to engage directly with the artists and their work.
Spanning a wide range of visual approaches,
The Photographic Nude 2026 reflects the diversity of contemporary photographic practice. Classical studies grounded in balance, light, and proportion appear alongside experimental and provocative interpretations that challenge conventional ideas of beauty and representation. Some works focus on the full figure, while others isolate fragments of the body, encouraging viewers to consider form, gesture, and surface as expressive elements in their own right. Together, these photographs reveal the nude not as a fixed genre, but as a continually evolving conversation.
Juried by LightBox directors Chelsea and Michael Granger, the exhibition situates current practice within a broader photographic lineage. From the modernist clarity of early twentieth-century photographers to more psychologically charged and conceptual approaches, the nude has remained a vital testing ground for photographers seeking to balance aesthetics, vulnerability, and meaning. The selected works demonstrate how contemporary artists continue to reinterpret this tradition, responding to historical precedents while asserting individual vision.
By bringing together voices from different regions and generations,
The Photographic Nude 2026 underscores the enduring relevance of the human body as a site of artistic inquiry. The exhibition invites viewers to look slowly and thoughtfully, recognizing the nude as more than an object of display. Instead, it becomes a space for reflection on intimacy, identity, and the shared physicality that connects us all. In this setting, photography reaffirms its capacity to honor the body with nuance, respect, and creative freedom.
Image:
Mysterious Brunette © Lloyd Kimmeldorf.