Spanning more than a century of image-making,
Queer Constellations: Photographs from the Aronowitz Family Collection unfolds at the Columbus Museum of Art as a dense and layered exploration of queer identity through photography. Installed in the Lower Level Walter Wing, the exhibition brings together 150 works drawn largely from a major donation by the Columbus-based Aronowitz Family, expanding into a broader reflection on how queer lives have been represented, coded and reimagined across time.
Rather than following a chronological narrative, the exhibition adopts a constellatory approach, where meaning emerges through proximity and association. The title, inspired by Andrea Geyer’s
Constellation series, points to this method: images are not fixed points but shifting elements within a larger network. Photographs by early figures such as George Platt Lynes and Peter Hujar enter into dialogue with works by contemporary artists including Catherine Opie, Paul Mpagi Sepuya and Wolfgang Tillmans, creating visual and conceptual echoes that resist linear history.
Portraiture anchors much of the presentation, though it appears in multiple, often unconventional forms. Bodies are staged, fragmented or partially obscured, reflecting the complexities of visibility and self-representation. Earlier works frequently carry a coded quality, shaped by periods of repression, while more recent images engage more directly with questions of identity, community and desire. Across generations, photography functions both as a tool of documentation and as a space for invention.
The salon-style installation reinforces the exhibition’s conceptual framework. Images cluster across the walls in a manner reminiscent of personal archives, encouraging viewers to navigate the display through their own associations. This strategy mirrors the ways queer histories have often been preserved—through informal, self-constructed collections that prioritize connection over categorization.
By bringing these works together,
Queer Constellations positions photography as an evolving field of relationships, where identity is not defined by a single image but shaped through accumulation, overlap and reinterpretation.
Image:
Andrea Geyer, Constellations. (Hilde Radusch and Eddy Klopsch), 2018 © Aronowitz Family Collection. Courtesy the artist.