Retold: Altered Photography, Cut and Paste, and
Open for Interpretation brings three linked exhibitions to Pace University Art Gallery from June 12 to July 30, 2026, each examining how photographs change meaning through editing, construction and reinterpretation. The project opens with a free public reception on June 11 and turns attention to a basic fact of image-making: photographs have always been shaped by hands, choices and context.
The starting point is a group of historic newsroom prints from the George Stephanopoulos Collection at Pace, where visible marks such as pen lines, white-out and cuts remain on the surface. Made in the mid-20th century, these prints show the editorial process before digital tools made manipulation less visible. They also reveal how much news images depended on practical decisions about what stayed in frame, what was removed and how a picture reached print.
In
Retold: Altered Photography, six contemporary artists, including Nouf Aljowaysir, Garth Amundson and Pierre Gour, Juyon Lee, Negin Mahzoun and Wendel A. White, use alteration to revisit personal narratives and social history. Their work resists the idea of photography as a neutral record and instead treats editing, layering and revision as part of the image’s meaning. Across the exhibition, the act of changing a photograph becomes a way to question how stories are framed and who controls them.
The two student exhibitions extend that discussion.
Cut and Paste presents newsroom photographs from the Stephanopoulos Collection and looks closely at manual editing in print journalism.
Open for Interpretation responds with digital work from ART 356: Experimental Photography, showing how younger artists use construction and deconstruction to rethink what an image can say. Together, the three exhibitions connect analog newsroom practice to current visual culture.
On view in Lower Manhattan, the program is free and open to the public. It offers a clear reminder that every photograph carries a history of selection, correction and interpretation, whether the marks are visible or hidden.
Image:
Wendel A. White, School for White Children, Brooklyn, Illinois 1/15, 2007/2010, Pigment Inkjet on Paper © Wendel A. White