Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit at Photographic Center Northwest takes the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence as a starting point, but the exhibition does not treat the occasion as a simple celebration. On view from June 29 to August 16, 2026, the show uses photography to track how symbols, public events and everyday life have shaped the American story over time.
The American flag appears throughout the exhibition, not as a fixed emblem but as an image loaded with changing meanings. Once read as a single national symbol, it now carries different and sometimes competing associations, depending on where and how it is seen. Alongside it, other flags tied to identity, solidarity and protest widen the visual language of belonging in the United States.
The photographs move between public events and quieter scenes. They include references to the Stonewall commemoration, the Dakota Access Pipeline protests, Black Lives Matter, the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol and civil unrest linked to ICE enforcement. Set beside more intimate and ordinary moments, these images suggest that history is not something separate from daily life. It is part of it, and often visible in the same frame.
The exhibition is not presented as a full survey. Instead, it gathers photographs across different decades and perspectives, including work by Brian Allen, Jon Beck, Ouidakathryn Bryson,
Debbie Fleming Caffery, Laura Gilpin, Nate Gowdy, Kris Graves,
Ed Kashi, Erica Lansner, Greta Pratt, Carrie Schreck, Bill Yuvan and Kiliii Yüyan. Historic material from the collections of W.M. Hunt, the Library of Congress, the National Archives and the Smithsonian adds further depth to the selection.
Curated by Terry Novak and Erin Spencer with input from Nate Gowdy, the exhibition looks at photography as witness. It shows how images preserve events, but also how they reveal the pressures, conflicts and shifting meanings that define American life.
Image:
Carrie Schreck, Immigrants are America (anti-ICE protest, Minneapolis, MN), 2026