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Marlo Pascual: Making Something Out of Something brings together seventeen works made between 2009 and 2014, presenting the late artist’s distinctive approach to found photography at the National Museum of Women in the Arts from July 24, 2026 to February 28, 2027.
Pascual, born in Nashville in 1972 and later based in Philadelphia, worked at the edge of photography and sculpture. She built images from anonymous photographs she found in thrift stores and online, then altered them through enlargement, cropping, folding, tearing and partial concealment. The result was often unsettling but never static. Familiar pictures turned strange, with faces blocked, bodies cut off and ordinary scenes pushed into something closer to an object than a flat image.
The exhibition shows how carefully Pascual handled scale and surface. By enlarging small found images to the size of furniture or sculpture and placing them behind thick Plexiglas, she changed how they occupied space. The pictures no longer read as disposable snapshots. They became physical things, with weight, volume and a sharper presence in the room. She also paired images with everyday objects, adding another layer of tension between the ordinary and the altered.
Humor runs through the work, but so does unease. Pascual’s cuts and distortions can be playful at first glance, yet they also point to discomfort in how photographs frame people and bodies. Her practice exposes the artifice already present in found images while making those manipulations visible and central to the work.
By focusing on this period of Pascual’s career, the exhibition highlights an artist who used simple material interventions to change the status of a photograph. What began as a discarded image became, through her hands, something precise, strange and newly charged.
Image:
Marlo Pascual, Untitled, 2014; Laser-cut digital C-print on Plexiglas, 55 x 40 in.; National Museum of Women in the Arts, Gift of Tony Podesta Collection, Washington, D.C.; Image courtesy of the artist and Casey Kaplan, New York