Stage Craft: Pictorialist Photography and Performance brings the theatrical side of early photography into focus at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art from October 11, 2026 to January 31, 2027. The exhibition looks at how Pictorialist photographers moved beyond straight documentary use and treated the camera as a tool for staged scenes, expressive printing and visual storytelling.
At the center of the show is a period when photography was still fighting for recognition as an art form. Pictorialist artists often built sets, directed models and worked closely with dancers, actors and filmmakers to construct images that felt closer to painting or theater than to journalism. Their photographs were designed, not simply captured, and that approach gave the medium a new artistic ambition.
The exhibition also shows how this style extended beyond the studio. Once photographers moved outdoors, they brought the same sense of composition to nature and city streets, turning landscapes and urban settings into places for drama and atmosphere. Soft focus, shadow and careful printing helped create scenes that leaned toward the poetic, the pastoral and later the abstract. Those methods also connected photography to broader visual culture, including stage design and early cinema.
By placing these works together, SBMA highlights the collaboration at the heart of Pictorialist practice. The photographs reflect a moment when image-making crossed into performance, with the photographer acting less like a passive recorder and more like a director. That shift remains visible in the final prints, which often feel carefully arranged and emotionally charged.
The exhibition offers a clear view of how early photographers used performance, staging and technical experimentation to expand the possibilities of the medium. It also shows how photography, even in its earliest artistic phases, was already working closely with theater, dance and film.
Image:
Anne W. Brigman, The Breeze, ca. 1910. Gelatin silver print. SBMA, Museum purchase with funds provided by the SBMA Women's Board.