44 E. 6th Street
Creative Resistance Captured in Tintype: Immortalizing Art as Activism is on view from April 23 through May 31, 2026 at the Contemporary Arts Center. In this focused presentation, large-format photographer Alex Lippert turns to the historic wet plate collodion process to consider how artistic practice operates as a form of civic engagement. The exhibition situates portraiture within a lineage of social documentation while foregrounding the tactile, time-intensive nature of tintype photography.
Originating in the mid-nineteenth century, the wet plate collodion method requires the artist to coat, sensitize, expose, and develop each plate by hand in a matter of minutes. The resulting metal images possess a singular presence: luminous highlights, velvety shadows, and surfaces that bear the trace of their making. Lippert embraces this deliberate pace as an analogue to creative resistance itself. Slowness becomes a refusal of disposability, and craft becomes a quiet assertion of value in an accelerated visual culture.
The project centers on artists from Cincinnati and surrounding communities whose practices challenge injustice, question entrenched systems, and nurture alternative forms of belonging. Through extended interviews and collaborative sittings, Lippert records not only likeness but conviction. Musicians, performers, visual artists, and organizers appear before the camera with direct gazes and composed gestures, their portraits accompanied by narratives that reveal how personal histories intertwine with collective struggle. Each tintype stands as both document and declaration, merging individual agency with shared purpose.
Rather than promising immediate political transformation, the exhibition reflects on art’s quieter capacities: to sustain memory, to cultivate empathy, and to articulate counter-narratives that endure beyond a single moment of protest. Within the galleries of the Contemporary Arts Center, these handcrafted images affirm that activism often begins in intimate spaces—studios, stages, neighborhoods—where imagination confronts constraint and creativity becomes a durable form of resistance.
Image:
Courtesy of the Contemporary Arts Center