Ann Rosen: Being Seen: Part III unfolds at Soho Photo Gallery as a continuation of a deeply collaborative and socially engaged practice. On view from March 25 to April 19, 2026, the exhibition brings together portraits and personal texts shaped through years of workshops with women whose lives intersect with homelessness, incarceration, and addiction. Rather than observing from a distance, Rosen works within a shared creative space where authorship becomes collective and visibility is carefully reclaimed.
The origins of the project trace back to 2015, in Brooklyn shelters where conversations gradually evolve into images. Participants paint their own backdrops, write fragments of their stories, and step in front of the camera on their own terms. These layered portraits carry the presence of multiple voices, blending visual and written expression into something that resists simplification. Each image holds a sense of deliberation, shaped not only by the photographer’s eye but by the subject’s intention.
As the work expands through collaborations with HousingPlus, the project deepens its engagement with communities navigating systemic hardship. Rosen constructs a temporary studio within familiar environments, introducing professional lighting and materials that shift the atmosphere without erasing context. Within this space, participants shape their representation—choosing posture, clothing, and symbolic objects that reflect both lived experience and imagined possibility. The act of being photographed becomes a form of self-definition rather than documentation.
Presented as diptychs, the pairing of image and text invites a slower encounter. The written narratives complicate the act of looking, challenging assumptions often imposed on marginalized women. These works do not seek to resolve the tension between vulnerability and strength; instead, they hold both in view.
Being Seen: Part III proposes visibility not as exposure, but as a deliberate and collaborative act—one that restores nuance, dignity, and a sense of agency to those too often overlooked.
Image:
Veteran A East NY, Brooklyn, courtesy of Soho Photo Gallery © Ann Rosen