1450 S. Dixie Highway
60 Seconds: Polaroids from the Collection, presented at the Norton Museum of Art from March 7 through August 16, 2026, explores the enduring fascination artists hold for instant photography. Drawing on works from the museum’s collection, the exhibition highlights the distinctive qualities of Polaroid images: their immediacy, their singular physical presence, and the sense of anticipation embedded in the brief moment of development. Unlike conventional photographic processes, the Polaroid produces a unique object that emerges gradually before the viewer’s eyes, transforming the act of image-making into a visible event.
The origins of instant photography date to the innovations of Edwin Land, whose introduction of the Land Camera in 1948 revolutionized photographic practice. The technology soon attracted artists intrigued by its capacity for experimentation. Polaroid prints invite manipulation while still fresh, allowing colors to shift, surfaces to warp, and images to be reworked directly by hand. This mixture of control and unpredictability encourages a spirit of play that many photographers embrace as part of their creative process.
Throughout the exhibition, works by artists from different generations demonstrate the versatility of the medium. Photographers such as
Walker Evans and
Lucien Clergue approach the format with a documentary sensitivity, capturing fleeting scenes with remarkable clarity. Other artists treat the Polaroid as a site of transformation. The experimental manipulations of Lucas Samaras push the material boundaries of the photograph, while the playful portraits created by
William Wegman reveal how the instant image lends itself to humor and staged performance. In a different register, figures such as Andy Warhol employ the format to document personalities within the vibrant cultural networks that surround them.
The exhibition also acknowledges the surprising scale possible within instant photography. Rare large-format Polaroid cameras, capable of producing prints measuring twenty by twenty-four inches, introduce a monumental dimension to a medium often associated with handheld snapshots. Across intimate portraits, experimental abstractions, and collaborative performances, the works gathered here demonstrate how the Polaroid remains a dynamic artistic tool. Even decades after its invention, the medium continues to captivate artists who value the immediacy, tactility, and creative unpredictability embedded within each instant image.
Image:
María Magdalena Campos-Pons. When I Am Not Here/Estoy Allá, Tríptico I, 1996. Portrait Photograph Series, circa 1990s. Polaroid Polacolor Pro triptych © María Magdalena Campos-Pons. Purchase, R. H. Norton Trust, 99.92.1-.3. Courtesy of the artist and Gallery Wendi Norris, San Francisco.