About Us: The American Imaginary, on view from February 28 through December 6, 2026 at the Queens Museum, brings together a rich constellation of photographs that question and expand the meaning of the word “American.” Curated by Terra Foundation Fellows Christina Chan, Annette Parkins, and Carlos David Trujillo—each selected through an open call rooted in the museum’s local community—the exhibition unfolds as three distinct yet interwoven explorations shaped by lived experience, research, and dialogue.
Spanning the mid-nineteenth century to 1979, the photographs on view include albumen and vintage silver gelatin prints drawn from the museum’s collection. The works move across geographies and generations, reflecting migration, family histories, public spectacle, intimacy, labor, and conflict. Some photographers were born within the United States, others beyond its borders, underscoring how American identity has always been formed through movement and exchange. These images negotiate between the intentions of their makers and the evolving interpretations of viewers, reminding us that meaning is never fixed but continually reframed by time and context.
The exhibition poses a deceptively simple question: what is American about American art? Rather than offering a singular definition, the Fellows embrace multiplicity. Chan’s engagement with Asian American histories and built environments, Parkins’ grounding in poetry and community service, and Trujillo’s work with archives and translation all inform the presentation. Over eight months, they catalogued and researched the collection while facilitating conversations with local stakeholders, treating the curatorial process itself as a form of collective inquiry.
In the end,
About Us: The American Imaginary suggests that “American-ness” is less a stable category than a site of negotiation. The assembled photographs evoke nostalgia and contradiction, visibility and erasure, aspiration and struggle. Together, they offer intimate and poetic responses to a term that resists closure. By foregrounding diverse perspectives within a shared civic space, the exhibition affirms that the American imaginary is not inherited whole but continuously shaped by those who claim, question, and redefine it.
Image:
[Massive deck girder leaving U.S. Steel's Gary, Indiana plant], c. 1940s. Vintage silver gelatin print. Gift of Charles Schwartz, 2006