Photography’s role in shaping the American story takes a wide historical sweep in
Through the Lens: American Photographs from the Carter Collection, on view from April 11 to August 16, 2026. Drawing on more than fifty works from the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, the exhibition looks at how photographers have documented the country’s landscapes, people and turning points across the 20th century and beyond.
The selection moves across several photographic traditions, from landscape and street photography to photojournalism and portraiture. Monumental views by
Ansel Adams and Laura Gilpin sit alongside the saturated color work of
William Eggleston and Eliot Porter, while
Robert Frank and
Gordon Parks bring in a more immediate, often unscripted view of American life. The range continues with portraits by Deana Lawson and
Alec Soth, whose work approaches identity and place from different generations and perspectives.
Rather than presenting a single visual history, the exhibition shows how photography in the United States has always been varied in purpose and style. Some images capture well-known public figures or major historical events. Others focus on ordinary streets, open land or private moments, building a record of daily life that is no less revealing. Together, the works show photography as both a witness to history and a way of shaping it.
The timing of the exhibition gives it added resonance. Presented in the nation’s 250th year, it reflects on how images have helped define ideas of place, memory and national identity. That broader view gives room for contradiction too: the country appears not as a fixed image, but as a collection of overlapping viewpoints shaped by region, class, race, politics and time.
With its mix of landmark names and different photographic approaches,
Through the Lens offers a clear view of how the medium has tracked the United States, and how the United States has, in turn, been seen through photography.
Image:
Laura Gilpin (American, 1891–1979), White Sands, 1945, gelatin silver print, 7 5/8 x 9 9/16 in. (19.37 × 24.29 cm), Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas, Bequest of the artist, P1979.123.144, © 1979 Amon Carter Museum of American Art