Street photography takes center stage in
Looking At You, a group exhibition at the Maine Museum of Photographic Arts running from June 5 to August 1, 2026. Bringing together eight photographers, the show focuses on the spontaneous, reactive nature of street photography, capturing fleeting encounters and everyday moments that together form a visual record of human life in public spaces.
The exhibition emphasizes the relationship between viewer and subject. Many of the images verge on portraiture, with people often facing the camera or appearing to look back at the viewer. This creates a sense of direct contact, reinforcing the idea that street photography is not just about observing from a distance but about engaging with the world in real time. The exact location or background matters less than the act of witnessing and preserving these brief instants.
Jan Pieter van Voorst van Beest contributes photographs from the New York subway and urban street scenes that he describes as a “laboratory of the human spirit.” Kevin Brusie presents handheld images from Manhattan, using small aperture and slow shutter speed to isolate movement within the city’s constant flow. Arlene Collins works in remote and politically sensitive locations, photographing people in shadow and low light to capture raw, unguarded moments. Richard Wexler offers candid urban portraits from Paris, influenced by
Henri Cartier-Bresson and French street photography traditions.
Other photographers bring different approaches to the theme. Denise Laurinaitis explores memory and family through images of childhood and everyday life.
Jack Montgomery uses nineteenth-century print processes and often photographs figures from behind, adding ambiguity and mood. Barbara Peacock focuses on rural Maine, documenting farming, fairs and quiet domestic moments. Bret Woodard recreates scenes using himself as a model, injectng humor and theatricality into the format.
Across these varied perspectives,
Looking At You treats street photography as a way to connect with shared experience, highlighting how small, seemingly ordinary moments accumulate into a larger record of life in cities and communities.
Image:
Denise Laurinaitis, In Flight, 2020 © Denise Laurinaitis