Intimacy, on view from April 22 to May 17, 2026, at Soho Photo Gallery, brings together a wide-ranging group of photographers exploring closeness in its many forms. Juried by Elinor Carucci, the exhibition moves beyond conventional ideas of intimacy as simply romantic or familial, opening the theme to include emotional, psychological, and sensory connections to people, places, and everyday spaces. Through portraiture, still life, documentary work, and experimental approaches, the show reflects how deeply personal meaning can emerge from the most ordinary moments.
Carucci, whose own photographic practice has long centered on family, vulnerability, and the private dimensions of daily life, frames intimacy as something both visible and elusive. In her curatorial statement, she points to familiar interiors, quiet landscapes, subway encounters, and domestic objects as equally capable of carrying emotional weight. This broader definition allows the exhibition to unfold across many registers: the closeness between relatives, the silent tension of strangers sharing public space, or the sense of attachment that lingers in a lived-in room. The result is a show built less around subject matter than around a way of seeing attentively.
The participating photographers—including Peter Agron, Audrey Bernstein, Laura Dodson, Erica Reade, Nathalie Rubens, and many others—approach the theme from distinct visual and emotional perspectives. Some works focus on the body and portraiture, where gesture and expression reveal vulnerability without spectacle. Others turn to still life or landscape, where intimacy is suggested through light, texture, and atmosphere rather than direct human presence. Street photography and documentary images extend this inquiry into public life, revealing how fleeting encounters and urban spaces can also hold unexpected tenderness or quiet recognition.
Founded in 1971 as one of New York’s longest-running cooperative galleries dedicated to photography, Soho Photo Gallery has long supported diverse voices and thematic exhibitions that encourage dialogue across practices.
Intimacy continues that tradition by presenting photography as a medium uniquely suited to closeness—capable of holding both private memory and shared experience within a single frame. Rather than offering a fixed definition, the exhibition invites viewers to recognize intimacy in its many subtle forms, where connection often appears in the quiet spaces between people, objects, and time itself.
Image:
Liliana Caruana - Lovers © Liliana Caruana