5566 W. Washington Blvd
A group of photographers turns their attention to everyday life in
Timeline: A Record of The Moment, an exhibition built around the idea of documenting change as it unfolds. Presented from August 28 to October 10, 2026, the project brings together eight artists working in San Francisco and Los Angeles, each contributing images drawn from their immediate surroundings. The result forms part of a larger, ongoing archive that tracks contemporary life across the United States.
The exhibition coincides with the country’s 250th anniversary, a context that informs its focus on social and political shifts. Rather than marking the milestone through historical reflection,
Timeline concentrates on the present. The participating photographers—David Ellis, Karen Friedmann, Patricia Lemke, Julie Pawlowski, Philip Sager, Nicole Schwegman, Chris Stevens-Yu and Xan Walker—approach their subjects through documentary, street photography and photojournalism, capturing scenes that range from public gatherings to quieter moments of daily routine.
Over an eight-month period, the artists develop their projects while working in parallel, supported by mentors
Ed Kashi in San Francisco and Ibarionex Perello in Los Angeles. This structure encourages both individual perspectives and shared exchange. The images reflect different environments and concerns, yet remain connected by a common emphasis on observation and timing. Changes in neighborhoods, public spaces and social interactions emerge as recurring themes.
Curated by Dr. Rotem Rozental, the exhibition selects from a broader pool of images that continue to expand beyond the gallery setting. The intention is not to present a fixed narrative, but to build a record that evolves over time. Photography here functions as both documentation and testimony, capturing details that might otherwise pass unnoticed.
By focusing on the present moment,
Timeline creates a visual snapshot of a country in transition. The project highlights how photography can serve as a tool for recording lived experience, preserving fragments of time that together form a larger picture of contemporary life.
Image:
© Ed Kashi