Presence: The Photography Collection of Judy Glickman Lauder, on view from October 18, 2026 through April 4, 2027 at the Sarasota Art Museum, brings together a remarkable selection of twentieth-century photography drawn from a deeply personal collection. Assembled over decades by photographer and humanitarian Judy Glickman Lauder, the exhibition gathers nearly one hundred works that reflect the breadth of human experience, while emphasizing photography’s enduring role as a witness to existence.
Moving across genres and geographies, the exhibition creates a dialogue between iconic figures such as
Diane Arbus,
Richard Avedon,
Gordon Parks, and
James Van Der Zee, alongside many other influential voices. Portraiture, documentary, and landscape converge, offering a layered exploration of what it means to be present—before the camera and within the world. The images range from intimate studies of individuals to sweeping views of environments shaped by time, labor, and history, each photograph carrying the imprint of a specific moment that refuses to disappear.
The exhibition takes its conceptual cue from the idea that every photograph functions as a trace of reality, a tangible connection to what has been. In this sense, the works operate not only as visual documents but also as emotional artifacts. Avedon’s stark portraits, Arbus’s psychologically charged encounters, and Parks’s socially engaged imagery each approach presence from distinct perspectives, yet all insist on the importance of recognition—of seeing and being seen.
Lauder’s collection reflects a lifelong commitment to both art and memory, shaped in part by her engagement with history and humanitarian work. Her approach to collecting privileges images that resonate beyond aesthetics, foregrounding empathy, resilience, and human dignity. This sensibility gives the exhibition a cohesive emotional undercurrent, even as it spans multiple styles and decades.
Organized as a traveling exhibition,
Presence continues its journey beyond Sarasota, extending its reflection on photography’s capacity to affirm life across different audiences. In bringing these works together, the exhibition underscores a simple yet profound idea: that photography preserves not only appearances, but the enduring weight of lived experience.
Image:
Norman Seeff (American, b. South Africa, 1939). Robert Mapplethorpe and Patti Smith, New York, 1969. Archival pigment print, 15 x 22 in. Portland Museum of Art, Maine. Promised Gift from the Judy Glickman Lauder Collection, 1.2016.1. Courtesy of the artist.