In Light and Shadow: A Photographic History from Indigenous America brings together contemporary Indigenous photographers and historical images in an exhibition that traces visual traditions across generations. On view from August 14 to September 26, 2026 at Obscura Gallery, the show is tied to a new book by Brian Adams and Sarah Stacke and includes a signing event that places the publication and exhibition in direct conversation.
Curated by Obscura Gallery with Adams and Stacke, the presentation features work by 20 contemporary Indigenous American photographers from the book, alongside historical photographs that help map visual lineages within and across communities. The subject matter ranges from sovereignty and identity to land, family and community, with images that move between fine art practice, family records, yearbook imagery and political documentation.
The book at the center of the exhibition presents more than 250 photographs by 80 individuals and collectives. It reaches from the earliest days of photography to the present, naming figures such as Jennie Fields Ross Cobb, widely regarded as the earliest known Indigenous American woman photographer, and
Martín Chambi, the Quechua photographer whose early 20th-century work in Peru remains influential. The exhibition also includes work by Kapuleiikealoonalani Flores, a Native Hawaiian photographer born in 2000, underscoring the range of generations and nations represented.
Brian Adams, an Iñupiaq photographer based in Anchorage, has built a career in environmental portraiture and in photographing Alaska Native villages. Sarah Stacke, based in Brooklyn, works as a photographer, author and archival researcher, often focusing on land and history. Together, they have shaped a project that challenges narrow accounts of Indigenous representation and instead places Indigenous photographers at the center of photographic history.
The exhibition arrives as both a visual survey and a corrective. By pairing contemporary work with historical images, it shows Indigenous photography not as a footnote to the medium, but as a long and varied tradition that has helped shape it from the start.
Image:
Brian Adams, Marie Rexford preparing maktak for a Thanksgiving Day feast, Kaktovik, Alaska, 2015 © Brian Adams, courtesy of the Obscura Gallery