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Ecstatic Time: The Alchemy of Photography, presented in the Norton Photography Gallery at the Phoenix Art Museum from July 29, 2026 through January 3, 2027, explores photography’s remarkable ability to transform perception and alter the experience of time. Bringing together nearly one hundred works from the renowned collection of the Center for Creative Photography, the exhibition celebrates two decades of collaboration between the museum and the research center based at the University of Arizona. Spanning more than a century of photographic practice, the exhibition reveals how artists have used the camera not only to record the world but also to reshape how it is seen and understood.
The title of the exhibition draws inspiration from the ideas of filmmaker and theorist Hollis Frampton, who described photographs as vehicles for entering “ecstatic time,” a condition in which the viewer stands momentarily outside the ordinary flow of lived experience. Photography has long been associated with capturing reality, yet the images presented here demonstrate how the medium often operates in more mysterious ways. Through unusual compositions, experimental processes, and unexpected subjects, photographers reveal details that escape the naked eye or transform familiar objects into something strange and compelling.
Organized into four thematic sections, the exhibition highlights the many ways photographers experiment with time and perception. Early twentieth-century images play a particularly strong role, including enigmatic works by figures such as
Ilse Bing and
Manuel Álvarez Bravo. Nearby, playful still lifes and technical experiments sit alongside photographs by innovators like Harold Edgerton, whose pioneering flash photography reveals motion frozen within fractions of a second. Other sections extend outward into astronomical imagery and conceptual photography, exploring how the camera records phenomena ranging from distant eclipses to subtle shifts in light and duration.
Across these varied works, the exhibition unfolds like a cabinet of visual curiosities. Images by influential photographers including
Ansel Adams and
Edward Weston appear alongside contemporary explorations of time by artists such as
Hiroshi Sugimoto. Together they demonstrate how photography continually reinvents itself as a medium of experimentation and wonder. Rather than offering a simple chronological history,
Ecstatic Time invites viewers to pause, observe closely, and discover how photographs possess the extraordinary ability to stretch, compress, and transform the very experience of time itself.
Image:
Kikuji Kawada, New Couple Who Closed Their Eyes, Tokyo, 1974. Gelatin silver print. Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona: Purchase, with matching funds from Hitachi America, Ltd., 90.11.2. © Kikuji Kawada