l101 S. Locust, Ste. B-07
From Sea to Shining Sea at PDNB Gallery takes the United States as both subject and setting, gathering photographs that stretch from the early 20th century to the present. Organized for the nation’s 250th year, the exhibition uses the camera to trace a broad picture of American life, from Indigenous histories and urban crowds to roadside rituals, holiday parades and coastal leisure.
Among the oldest works is
Edward S. Curtis’s
Launching the Whaleboat - Cape Prince of Wales from 1928, drawn from his long-running documentation of
The North American Indian. Curtis’s project, one of the most ambitious of its era, shaped a visual record of Native communities across North America and remains a key reference point in American photography.
Alfred Stieglitz is represented by
The Ferry Boat from 1910, a dense scene that captures passengers packed together on the water and reflects the photographer’s role in bringing photography into the art world through
Camera Work and his wider advocacy.
The exhibition also moves through the century with pictures of everyday American life. Walter Rosenblum’s
Chick’s Candy Store, Pitt St. N.Y. shows men and boys gathered outside a Lower East Side shop in 1938, while
Bill Owens’s suburban parade scene from 1971 reflects the rituals of postwar neighborhood life. Neal Slavin’s
Staff of Statue of Liberty from 1973 turns a national symbol into a social portrait, and Earlie Hudnall,
JR.’s
Girl with Flag from 1991 brings attention to Black life in Houston’s historic wards.
Landscape and regional identity also hold a place in the show. Jack Ridley’s view of Big Bend records the Texas park in a way that recalls earlier Western photographers, while Al Satterwhite’s
Surf Wagon captures youth culture on Florida’s coast. Chris Verene’s family wedding photograph from 1997 closes the span with a scene of celebration rooted in everyday American experience.
With about 35 works on view,
From Sea to Shining Sea presents America through a series of distinct but connected views, using photography’s documentary reach to show how the country has been seen, lived and remembered.
Image:
Al Satterwhite, Surf Wagon, 1964 © Al Satterwhite