The Living Hand, on view from June 17 to August 1, 2026, brings together 11 women artists from across the United States in a group exhibition organized in collaboration with
The Hand Magazine. The show focuses on alternative photographic processes and printmaking, placing attention on material experimentation and the physical act of making.
The exhibition includes work by Lisa Brussell, Ellen Carey, Carla Christian, Adrienne Defendi, Dora Duan, Janet Fine, Stephanie Kolpy, Olivia Overfield, Katie Shapiro, Shanna Strauss and Nicole White. Their practices span different methods, but the shared emphasis is clear: the image as object, surface and process. Rather than rely on standard photographic production, the artists push into hand-based techniques that leave evidence of contact, layering and chemical transformation.
That focus gives the exhibition its title. The “living hand” suggests work that remains connected to touch, labor and change, even after the image is complete. In this context, photography is not treated as a neutral record. It becomes a field for texture, construction and repair, with printmaking adding another layer of physical presence.
By gathering artists from different regions and backgrounds, the exhibition also reflects the range of current work in alternative photographic practice in the United States. The result is less a single style than a shared interest in process-driven imagery and the handmade qualities that continue to shape contemporary work outside conventional digital production.
The Living Hand places that work in direct view and gives space to artists whose images depend on patience, material sensitivity and close attention to craft. The exhibition’s strength lies in that directness: each piece carries the mark of its making, and together they show how photographic process can still feel immediate, tactile and unresolved.
Image:
© Lisa Brussell