Perceptual Shifts: Photographs from the Collection brings together works that challenge the idea that photography is a straightforward record of what stands in front of the lens. On view from June 28 to September 20, 2026 at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, the exhibition gathers images from the museum’s collection that move between sharp detail, blur, abstraction and staged construction.
The photographs in the show turn familiar settings into unstable ones. Everyday places and well-known landscapes appear altered, sometimes nearly unrecognizable, as artists use focus, light, surface and scale to complicate what the viewer thinks is being seen. In some works, clarity does not bring certainty. In others, the image itself is built from manipulated environments, sculptural sets or added light, making the photograph an invention rather than a neutral trace.
Included in the exhibition are works by Uta Barth,
John Divola, Anthony Hernandez, Barbara Kasten, Susan Lakin, Chris McCaw and Trevor Paglen. Their practices span the analog and digital eras, but they share a common interest in how vision works and how easily it can be unsettled. Some of the photographs emphasize atmosphere and perception, while others use experimental processes to push the medium away from conventional documentary use.
The exhibition’s title reflects that central concern. These are images that produce shifts in perception rather than easy recognition. A scene may at first look ordinary, but the longer it is viewed, the less stable it becomes. That tension runs through the exhibition and gives it its force. Photography here is not presented as proof. It is presented as a way of testing what can be seen, and how quickly seeing can become uncertain.
By placing these works together, SBMA highlights a side of photography that is less about description than about doubt, distance and construction. The result is a collection-based exhibition that asks viewers to look again, and then look once more.
Image:
Sunburned GSP#202 (SF Bay/expanding), 2008. Unique gelatin silver paper negative. SBMA, Museum Purchase. © Chris McCaw.