In progress at SCNY presents recent work by the Photo Workshop Group, a photography collective made up of Salmagundi Club members who meet regularly to test ideas, compare approaches and work through technical challenges together. On view from June 2 to June 19, 2026, the exhibition reflects a year of practical sessions that moved from close-up studies and portrait lighting to night photography, still life, printing and field work.
The group’s approach is hands-on and direct. Members bring cameras to monthly meetings, try out assignments, and learn by photographing in and around the clubhouse as well as at outside locations. Recent sessions included macro photography, indoor and outdoor portrait work, and still life studies in the Hartley Gallery and the Club library. The settings may be familiar, but the goal is to find fresh images in ordinary places and to solve problems of exposure, composition and light in real time.
Several meetings pushed members into unfamiliar territory. Evening sessions around the Club and nearby streets focused on balancing natural and artificial light, while a visit to Gleason’s Gym in Dumbo offered a documentary setting with movement, low light and close attention to subjects. Printing and presentation also played a role, with a discussion led by fine-art printer James Senzer on paper choice, tonal range, mounting and framing. The program has also included presentations by guest artists working in portraiture and in newer image-making tools, including artificial intelligence.
The exhibition includes work such as Maria Passannante-Der’s
Boxer and Neil Allen’s
Joyous Salmagundi Photogs, alongside other images made during the group’s recent meetings. Together, they show a range of visual styles but share the same foundation: observation, experimentation and the habit of learning by doing.
The Photo Workshop Group meets monthly, usually on the last Friday, and remains open to Salmagundi Club members interested in photography. Its purpose is straightforward: to encourage conversation, technical growth and collaborative seeing through regular, practical work.
Image:
Rosemary Hawkins, Harbor in Bonavista, 2026 © Rosemary Hawkins