The 43rd Center Annual at Houston Center for Photography brings together 35 lens-based artists in an exhibition that connects family history, migration, grief, labor and place through contemporary photography and moving image. On view from June 4 to August 16, 2026, the group show reflects the breadth of the center’s global community while keeping a strong Texas presence at its core.
Selected by curator and educator Asha Iman Veal, the exhibition gives particular weight to work that treats photography as a record of lived experience. Veal, who works between Paris and Chicago and has curated widely on contemporary image-making, shaped the annual around stories that move between private memory and larger social histories. The result is a show where portraiture, landscape and video all carry personal and political meaning.
Among the featured works, Shuyuan Zhou’s
A Story of Our Mothers & Fathers presents a quiet family portrait shaped by matrilineal memory and survival. Justin A. Carney’s
Those Left Behind turns inward to trace grief within a family setting, using homes, cars and community spaces to frame loss and connection. Atefeh Farajolahzadeh’s
No Answer uses moving image, sound and reflective narration to address migration, distance and loneliness from an Iranian-American perspective.
Other artists extend the exhibition’s reach across geographies and generations. Alfredo Esparza Cárdenas and Brenda Virginia Castro work with landscape and gesture, while Ursula Sokolowska builds a self-portrait practice out of fragments of the Midwestern city around her. Anselm Ebulue photographs everyday life in Peckham, London, where Black diasporic communities are being reshaped by gentrification. Across the show, family is not always literal; it appears in land, neighborhood, memory and inheritance as well.
The exhibition includes artists based in Houston, Chicago, London, Paris, Buenos Aires, Botswana, Mexico and elsewhere, underscoring the Center Annual’s international scope. In that mix, the familiar and the distant sit side by side, and the photographs register a shared present marked by change, continuity and the effort to hold onto both.
Image:
© Nyo Jinyong Lian