The Maine Museum of Photographic Arts opens its new space with
Of Home and Place, a group exhibition presented in memory of photographer James R. Salomon and centered on questions of belonging, memory and the relationship between people and the landscapes they inhabit. Running from June 5 to August 1, 2026, the show brings together over twenty artists whose work moves between photography, sculpture, fiber and mixed media, many of them based in Maine or with deep ties to the region.
Salomon, who died in 2024 after a thirty-year career, was known for photographs that balanced architecture and light with a sensitivity to domestic space and the natural environment. His work, often made for magazines as well as for personal projects in the Maine woods and along its coast, forms the emotional core of the exhibition. The show was organized by museum director Denise Froehlich with support from the Salomon family, and it includes an original composition by composer Barry Morse.
The artists in the exhibition approach home and place from different angles. Todd Watts presents large inkjet prints that avoid fixed narratives and instead treat time as fluid. Gary Green photographs what he calls “wounded landscapes,” showing abandoned structures and quiet details that suggest both loss and resilience. Megan Jones works with a self-portrait alter ego, Yeti, set in Maine’s wintry landscapes, while Lin Lisberger incorporates wood, clay and paint into sculptural pieces tied to walks and place-based memories.
Other works turn to family history, inheritance and personal archives. Keily Anderson Staley layers photographs with recovered documents from a burned family cabin, and Emily Belz photographs empty houses and leftover traces of daily life. Eugene Cole uses the wet plate collodion process in self-portraits that record time passing through the body. Across these varied approaches, the exhibition treats home not as a fixed structure but as something shaped by memory, environment and change.
The opening of MMPA’s new location gives the exhibition added weight, marking both a tribute to Salomon and the start of a new phase for the museum as a gathering place for photography and community engagement.
Image:
Christine Schiavo, Backyard Series, Mitzi and The Crows, 2001/2026 © Christine Schiavo