George Hurrell’s polished portraits return to the National Portrait Gallery in a second installment of
Star Power: Photographs from Hollywood’s Golden Age by George Hurrell (A Sequel), bringing another set of vintage images from the 1930s and 1940s into view. Opening on February 13, 2026, the display draws from a group of 70 Hurrell portraits in the museum’s collection and focuses on the studio lighting, posed elegance and controlled glamour that helped define Hollywood’s public image.
Hurrell built his reputation at MGM before opening his own studio, where he shaped the look of film stars for magazines, publicity stills and studio promotion. His photographs rarely leave anything to chance. Light falls sharply across cheekbones, eyes and hair, while carefully arranged poses give the subjects a sense of distance and poise. The result is a style that turned actors into icons and helped establish a visual standard for screen-era glamour that still feels familiar today.
The new selection includes some of the era’s most recognizable names: Joan Crawford, Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich, Clark Gable, Jean Harlow and Myrna Loy, among others. Each portrait reflects Hurrell’s ability to make studio photography look larger than life without losing clarity or control. The images show how Hollywood sold fantasy through precision, creating faces and bodies that were instantly legible to a mass audience.
This second presentation follows the gallery’s earlier run of the same exhibition, which remained on view through January 25, 2026. Together, the two installations offer a broader look at Hurrell’s influence and at the way Hollywood portraiture helped build celebrity culture. Curated by senior curator of photographs Ann Shumard, the exhibition places emphasis on both the technical mastery of the photographer and the enduring power of the studio portrait as a form of public image-making.
More than archival material, these photographs read as evidence of a system that linked cinema, publicity and aspiration. Hurrell’s portraits did not just record stars; they helped create the visual language through which stardom itself was understood.
Image:
Marlene Dietrich. Artist: George Hurrell. Gelatin silver print. c. 1935. National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; acquired in part through the generosity of an anonymous donor