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Animality: 100 Years of Photographs, on view from August 8 to December 12, 2026, at the Center for Creative Photography’s Alice Chaiten Baker Interdisciplinary Gallery, examines the enduring and often complicated relationship between humans and animals through the lens of photography. Drawing from the institution’s renowned collection, the exhibition brings together 100 photographs and related objects spanning a full century, offering visitors a broad visual history of how animals have been observed, represented, and understood across time.
Rather than presenting animals solely as subjects of beauty or scientific curiosity, the exhibition explores the many ways they intersect with human life—emotionally, culturally, and ethically. Domestic pets, working animals, wildlife, and symbolic creatures all appear across a wide range of photographic formats, from documentary images and portraits to experimental works and archival objects. These photographs ask viewers to consider not only how animals are seen, but also how human values shape that vision. The exhibition moves beyond simple admiration, opening conversations about empathy, control, companionship, and responsibility.
A distinctive aspect of
Animality is its collaborative development with seven honors students from the University of Arizona enrolled in professors Netzin and Dieter Steklis’ Human Animal Interrelationships course. Their academic focus on the biological, emotional, and social dimensions of human-animal relationships informs the structure of the exhibition, which is organized into eleven thematic sections. These groupings examine subjects such as expression, coexistence, labor, ritual, and animal welfare, allowing photography to function as both artistic medium and tool of reflection.
The Center for Creative Photography, founded in 1975 and home to major archives including those of
Ansel Adams and Edward Weston, has long served as a place where photography meets scholarship.
Animality extends that mission by combining historical images with contemporary questions about coexistence and care. Across these works, animals are not simply observed from a distance—they emerge as participants in shared histories. The exhibition invites viewers to reflect on the ways photography shapes our understanding of other living beings, and what those images reveal about ourselves in return.
Image:
Garry Winogrand, untitled, ca. 1962, Garry Winogrand Archive/Gift of the artist, © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco