Vision(ary) 2026: Raising Our Voices turns the Griffin Museum of Photography’s summer public art program into a broad survey of activism in the United States. On view from June 5 to September 28, the exhibition brings photography into public space with banner works and installations around the museum, focusing on protest, advocacy and social justice across different periods of American life.
The project arrives as the country moves toward its 250th anniversary, and the emphasis is on how images have shaped public memory around civil rights, racial equity, gender justice, labor rights, immigration reform, environmental protection and democratic accountability. Rather than treat protest as a single historical moment, the show connects past and present struggles through photography that documents resistance and gives visibility to people and communities often left out of official narratives.
This year’s edition includes work by Alexey Yurenev,
Aline Smithson, Andrea Bruce, Angela Rowlings, Ashima Yadava, Ashley Gilbertson, Bethany Mollenkof, Carol Guzy, Daniella Zalcman, Dina Litovsky, Donna Ferrato,
Eugene Richards, Haruka Sakaguchi, Jackie Neale, Jon Henry, Joshua Lott, Kiliii Yüyan, Kris Graves, Leslie Sheryll, Lindsay Morris, Lola Flash, Louie Palu, Mark Peterson, Susan Marie White, Tamir Kalifa,
Terry Barczak, Victor J. Blue and Zoe Perry-Wood. The range of photographers reflects the breadth of the subject itself, moving from documentary approaches to more personal and interpretive forms of visual storytelling.
Curated by Elizabeth Krist, a longtime photography editor and curator whose work includes major projects for National Geographic and Photoville, the exhibition has the structure of a public conversation rather than a single narrative. Krist’s background in photo editing and editorial storytelling fits the project’s emphasis on images that carry both journalistic weight and cultural memory.
Supported by local cultural groups, foundations and Photoville,
Vision(ary) 2026 uses the streets around the Griffin Museum as part of the exhibition experience. The result is an installation that places photography in daily view and gives the act of looking a civic dimension.
Image:
© Joshua Lott.