Picturing Equality: The Lambda Network at Kodak, on view at the Gallery Obscura at the Eastman Museum from June to October 2026, brings forward a vital and largely unseen chapter of corporate and social history. Centered on the Lambda Network, Kodak’s LGBTQ employee resource group founded in the early 1990s, the exhibition reveals how collective courage and quiet persistence reshaped workplace culture during a time when visibility carried real personal risk.
Drawing from newly uncovered archives, photographs, video materials, and first-person oral histories, the exhibition traces the lived experience of queer employees navigating professional life while remaining closeted. These personal accounts underscore the emotional cost of silence, but also illuminate how shared stories became tools for change. Through educational initiatives, internal advocacy, and sustained dialogue with leadership, Lambda members helped translate visibility into concrete policy reforms that expanded benefits and protections for LGBTQ employees.
Photography plays a central role throughout the exhibition, not only as documentation but as an active agent of belonging. Portrait sessions, photobooths, and visual campaigns allowed Lambda members to claim space within the company’s visual culture, aligning their push for equality with Kodak’s own identity as an image-maker. In doing so, they demonstrated how representation—who is seen, how, and by whom—can influence institutional values and public perception.
The impact of the Lambda Network extended far beyond Rochester. With the support of senior leadership, Kodak emerged as a national example of LGBTQ workplace inclusion, influencing broader corporate standards at a pivotal historical moment. The exhibition highlights this ripple effect, showing how internal advocacy can generate lasting cultural and social change.
Developed through the Remembering the Lambda Network at Kodak project, this exhibition functions as both an archive and a tribute. It honors the individuals who took risks to imagine a more equitable workplace and preserves their legacy for future generations.
Picturing Equality reminds viewers that progress is often built through incremental acts of visibility, solidarity, and care—and that images can be powerful instruments of justice and memory.
Image:
Amy Friend (left) and JoAnne Metzler, portrait taken at Lambda Photobooth, 2000. Lambda brought its popular photobooth to local events, including Image Out and the Gay Alliance of the Genesee Valley’s Pride Picnic, as well as to national events such as the annual Out and Equal Workplace Summit.