At Silver Eye Center for Photography,
Fellowship 26 brings together six emerging artists whose practices reflect the evolving possibilities of contemporary photography. On view from May 21 to August 8, 2026, the annual exhibition highlights work shaped by memory, family histories, ritual, and critical reflection on how images construct identity. Through photography, installation, GIFs, text, and moving image, the selected artists create a conversation that moves between the personal and the political, offering new perspectives on belonging and representation.
This year’s award recipients approach photography as both document and intervention. Jamie Ho, recipient of the International Fellowship Award, uses photography and new media to examine the cultural pressures placed on Asian American women and femmes. Her work draws from ancestral Chinese traditions while confronting the visual legacy of spectacle and assimilation. Javier Griffey, awarded the Keystone Award, builds photographic essays that merge personal archives with text and material gestures, creating layered meditations on fragmented truth and the ethics of memory.
Other featured artists continue this exploration through equally distinct visual languages. Robert Contreras II reflects on his Ecuadorian and Mexican American heritage, using performance and photography to reclaim identity and bridge generational distance. Jacquelyn Johnson combines prose, textiles, and image-making to investigate storytelling and its inevitable failures, while Helen Jones turns her attention to the subtle traces left between people and place. Conner Gordon challenges the authority of documentary photography itself, treating the image as a form of unreliable narration that opens unexpected interpretive possibilities.
Juried by Melissa Catanese, Anthony Francis, and Jessica Johnston,
Fellowship 26 reflects Silver Eye’s continued commitment to supporting experimental voices in photography. The exhibition demonstrates how the medium continues to expand beyond traditional boundaries, embracing hybrid practices and new forms of visual storytelling. Rather than offering fixed conclusions, these works invite viewers into processes of questioning and discovery. In doing so,
Fellowship 26 becomes less a survey of emerging talent than a portrait of photography as an active, unsettled, and deeply human form of inquiry.
Image:
Jamie Ho, Cross Contamination, 2025. Courtesy of the artist © Jamie Ho