Peter Ydeen: Waiting for Palms presents seventy photographs from Morocco and Egypt at the Noyes Galleries at Stockton University Kramer Hall, on view from June 9 through September 18, 2026. The exhibition focuses on everyday scenes in urban and roadside settings, where older traditions and modern growth sit side by side with little separation.
Ydeen’s pictures do not chase major landmarks or dramatic moments. They hold on to quieter details: a woman standing beside a mural, children framed by a window, a donkey in a village, market stalls, walls, wires and roads that shape how people move through the day. The work gives equal weight to people and surroundings, treating streets, facades and open spaces as part of the same visual story.
The series moves from Morocco’s cities and desert edges to Egypt’s train lines and river towns. In Marrakech, Fez and the Atlas region,
Peter Ydeen captures scenes that feel suspended between permanence and change. In Cairo, Luxor and Aswan, he follows the flow of daily life along the Nile, where dense urban activity gives way to quieter stretches of road, rail and riverfront. Across both countries, the photographs show ordinary life inside landscapes that carry layers of history, commerce and belief.
Ydeen, who lives in Easton, Pennsylvania, has built a career across photography, painting, sculpture and gallery work. His images often combine subtle color, strong light and a steady eye for pattern and geometry. In his own description, photography is a form of conversation, and that idea comes through clearly here. The photographs ask viewers to look closely at unheroic moments and to see how much meaning can settle into a passing gesture or an overlooked corner.
The exhibition occupies two galleries at Kramer Hall and opens with a public reception on June 18. It offers a calm but detailed look at places where the everyday remains vivid, even as larger changes press in around it.
Image:
Peter Ydeen, Exhale, Archival
print on hahnemühle satin
bartya paper © Peter Ydeen