Torpedo Factory Art Center #312. 105 N. Union Street
AMERICA 250, MEG Group Show at Multiple Exposures Gallery looks at the images and places that keep shaping the national story. On view from July 2 to 26, 2026, the exhibition brings together photographs selected by juror Andy Holtin, chair of the Department of Art at American University, in a group show timed to a year of renewed attention on American identity.
The works in the exhibition focus on familiar symbols, but they do so with a sharper eye than the usual postcard view. Monuments, streets, public spaces and everyday scenes appear not as fixed emblems, but as places loaded with competing meanings. Holtin’s selections point toward the complexity behind the shorthand of “America,” asking how a country is represented, who gets included in that image, and what is left out when the familiar becomes a symbol.
That question runs through the exhibition’s range of artists, including Russell Barajas, Alistair Corden, Stacy Smith Evans, Soomin Ham, Eric Johnson, Maureen Minehan, Van Pulley, Sarah Hood Salomon, Alan Sislen, Tom Sliter and Fred Zafran. Their photographs approach the subject from different angles, but share an interest in place as a site of memory, performance and contradiction. Some images hold onto the architectural or geographic markers most closely associated with national identity. Others quietly disrupt those markers, letting the ordinary carry more weight than the iconic.
The exhibition arrives at a moment when the language of national belonging feels especially charged. Rather than offering a single answer,
AMERICA 250 treats the American landscape and its symbols as open questions. It asks how photographs frame the country’s myths, and how they can also expose their gaps.
Presented in Studio 7 at the Torpedo Factory Art Center, the show is open daily except July 4. It offers a concise but pointed look at how photography still shapes the way Americans picture themselves.
Image:
Standing Vigil © Maureen Minehan