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Atlas of the Present: Collage and Photography Today – Virtual, on view from February 19 through May 19, 2026, brings renewed attention to the tactile, deliberate act of making at a time when photographic culture has been reshaped by artificial intelligence. As debates around machine-generated imagery intensified throughout 2025, many artists turned back to processes grounded in the hand, the cut edge, and the physical surface. This exhibition embraces that return, positioning photo-based collage as both a response to and reflection on our current visual climate.
The works gathered here demonstrate how collage continues to function as a vital conceptual language. Fragments of photographs, texts, archival materials, and found imagery intersect in layered compositions that speak to memory, displacement, identity, and emotion. Rather than offering seamless illusions, these artists foreground rupture and reconstruction. Edges remain visible; seams are celebrated. In doing so, they assert the presence of the maker and reestablish photography as something shaped through touch and intention.
The top prize winners—Rebecca Dietrich (1st Place), Mélina Bismuth (2nd Place), and Michael S Cohen (3rd Place)—each present distinctive approaches to assembling and reimagining the photographic image. Their works exemplify how fragmentation can generate new coherence, how the act of cutting and recombining becomes a means of mapping personal and collective narratives. Across the exhibition, individual voices remain strong while contributing to a broader conversation about the state of contemporary image-making.
Juror Paris Chong, Gallery Director of the Leica Gallery Los Angeles, brings decades of curatorial experience to her selection. Having participated in international fairs such as Art Basel and Paris Photo, Chong highlights the sophistication and intentionality evident throughout the exhibition. Her longstanding affinity for collage underscores the show’s central premise: that in an era of digital abundance, artists continue to find meaning in the deliberate layering of images.
Atlas of the Present ultimately affirms collage not as nostalgia, but as a resilient and forward-looking form capable of articulating the complexities of our time.
Image:
First Place Winner Rebecca Dietrich, Liminal View. © Rebecca Dietrich