The Griffin Museum’s
Photography Atelier 40 brings together the portfolios of artists from its yearlong project-building program, offering a look at work developed through critique, editing and sequencing rather than quick one-off submission. On view from June 12 to July 26, 2026, the exhibition reflects the museum’s training model, which pairs emerging and more advanced photographers with instructors Emily Belz and Jennifer McClure.
The Atelier program is designed to help photographers sharpen both their images and the way they present them. Participants work through assignments that encourage experimentation in subject matter and approach, then move into conversations about portfolio reviews, artist statements, bios, websites, social media and book publishing. The result is a group of projects that carry both personal focus and professional polish, shaped over months of sustained development.
This edition includes work from photographers such as Adrien Bisson, Benson Margulies, Darrell Roak, Elizabeth Wiese, Ellen Foust, Julia Levites, Susan Collins, Sylvia Stagg-Giuliano, Will Korn, Andrew Jennings, Erica Martin, Jennifer Cantwell, Linda Lea Smith, Lynne Buchanan, Leslie Dowe Twitchell, Robert J. Birnbaum, Shiona Sommerville and Tracy Laulhere. Their projects move across farm life, rivers, forests, urban architecture, family memory, body image, mental health, mythology, and climate-driven change, giving the exhibition a wide range of subjects and visual styles.
Several of the artists work in long-form series rooted in place. Others turn inward, using self-portraiture, family archives or personal narrative to examine identity and loss. Across the exhibition, photography appears not just as a record of what was seen, but as a way to sort through memory, habits of looking and the conditions that shape daily life. The tone shifts from documentary to conceptual, from black-and-white to color, from analog process to digital layering.
By placing all of these portfolios in the main gallery at Winchester,
Photography Atelier 40 gives public form to a year of experimentation and revision, showing how a shared learning environment can produce distinctly individual work.
Image:
© Julia Levites