200 N. Arthur Ashe Boulevard
Promise and Peril: Recent Acquisitions in American Landscape Photography, on view at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts from May 8 through October 4, 2026, examines the evolving relationship between image-making and the American land. Drawing from works acquired since 2022, the exhibition spans more than a century and a half of photographic practice, offering a timely reflection aligned with the 250th anniversary of the United States.
From its earliest days, landscape photography has played a central role in shaping national identity. Expansive views of mountains, rivers, and open terrain once functioned as visual affirmations of abundance and possibility. In this exhibition, such images remain present, yet they are reframed through a contemporary lens that acknowledges the complexities beneath their surface. The idealized vision of untouched wilderness is placed alongside photographs that reveal the environmental and social costs of expansion.
Several works confront the consequences of industrial growth, resource extraction, and suburban development. Forests give way to cleared land, rivers bear the marks of pollution, and infrastructure cuts through once-continuous terrain. These images do not merely document change; they register the cumulative impact of decisions that have reshaped both landscape and community. The sense of scale that once inspired awe now carries an undercurrent of fragility, suggesting a shifting relationship between people and place.
At the same time, the exhibition broadens the narrative by foregrounding perspectives historically absent from the genre. Photographers bring attention to the experiences of women and people of color, offering alternative ways of seeing and inhabiting the land. These works challenge inherited conventions, expanding the definition of landscape to include personal, cultural, and political dimensions that extend beyond scenic representation.
Curated by Dr. Sarah Kennel, the exhibition positions American landscape photography as an active and evolving field rather than a fixed tradition.
Promise and Peril underscores how images of the land continue to reflect broader tensions within society—between preservation and exploitation, myth and reality—inviting viewers to reconsider what the landscape reveals about the past and what it suggests about the future.
Image:
Amanda after a Birthday Party, Jackson, Wyoming from the series Frontcountry (detail), 2010, Lucas Foglia (American, born 1983), inkjet print. Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Gift of Deborah L. Wlaz, 2025.640 @ Lucas Foglia