InLiquid Gallery is a Philadelphia-based contemporary art organization dedicated to expanding access to the visual arts while strengthening the region’s creative community. Founded in 1999 by artist Rachel Zimmerman, InLiquid emerged at a moment when the internet was beginning to reshape how artists could share their work beyond traditional gallery models. What began as an online platform has since evolved into a robust nonprofit organization that connects artists, audiences, and institutions through exhibitions, education, and sustained community engagement.
Photography has long been an integral part of InLiquid’s programming, reflecting the medium’s accessibility, immediacy, and relevance to contemporary life. The organization regularly features photographers among its more than 350 artist members, presenting photographic work that ranges from documentary and portraiture to conceptual and experimental practices. Exhibitions often explore timely social issues, urban experience, identity, and personal narrative, demonstrating how photography continues to function as both a record of lived reality and a powerful artistic language.
InLiquid’s flagship gallery in the Crane Arts Building serves as a central hub for exhibitions, artist talks, workshops, and public programs, many of which highlight photography as a tool for dialogue and reflection. Alongside this dedicated space, InLiquid’s extensive satellite exhibition program places photographic works in corporate offices and residential buildings throughout Philadelphia. This approach brings photography into everyday environments, reaching audiences who may not typically visit galleries while creating meaningful opportunities and income for artists.
Beyond physical exhibitions, InLiquid’s digital platform remains a vital resource for the region’s photographic community. Online artist portfolios, opportunity listings, and event calendars support professional development and visibility, reinforcing the organization’s original mission of connectivity. By integrating photography across its gallery, satellite, and online initiatives, InLiquid Gallery honors the medium’s democratic roots while championing contemporary artistic voices. Through its sustained commitment to artists and public access, InLiquid continues to shape a more inclusive and engaged visual arts culture in Greater Philadelphia.
The Brussels Street Photography Festival (BSPF) is pleased to announce that Josef Koudelka, one of the most iconic photographers of our time, will be the guest of honor at this year’s 10th-anniversary celebration. Koudelka will receive the festival’s Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of his extraordinary contributions to photography during a special evening at Brussels City Hall on May 30, 2026. The event will also feature an interview with the photographer and the announcement of this year’s competition winners.
British documentary photographer Sophie Green presents Tangerine Dreams, a vivid portrait of the communities, subcultures and social gatherings that shape contemporary Britain. For over a decade, she has documented how rituals and traditions build connection, belonging and shared identity. This celebratory and emotively kaleidoscopic work will be on show as a free exhibition at the Martin Parr Foundation, Bristol from 4 June - 6 September 2026.
Passing Through is a solo exhibition by Mexican photographer Olivia Vivanco exploring migration in Mexico through abandoned objects, transit spaces, and visual traces of displacement. The project offers an ethical, human-centered perspective on migrant journeys, memory, and resilience.
Casemore Gallery announces its representation of Mike Brodie, marking a significant new chapter in the artist’s career. The collaboration launches with Brodie’s debut solo exhibition at the gallery, opening Saturday, May 2, from 5–7 pm.
Opening July 29, 2026, at Phoenix Art Museum in Phoenix, Arizona, Ecstatic Time: The Alchemy of Photography is a major photography exhibition featuring nearly 100 works from the Center for Creative Photography. The exhibition explores how photography transforms reality, perception, and time through surreal, astronomical, and experimental imagery.
Shot shortly before his passing in 2022, Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere is a loving
tribute to one of the most important photographers of the mid-20th century.
In Alpine Hiatus: The Snow No Longer Tastes Like Snow, Italian photographer and architect Filippo Poli turns his camera toward a landscape caught between memory and mutation. The project unfolds as both personal archaeology and ecological reflection — an inquiry into what remains when the snow, once a symbol of purity and permanence, becomes an artifact of artifice. Winner of the April 2026 All About Photo Solo Exhibition contest, Poli’s work traces the dissonance between remembrance and reality, offering a haunting meditation on disappearance.
Odyssey is more than a journey. It is a search for meaning, a crossing of thresholds, a story of growth and resilience. Bringing together a wide range of work from over 100 photographers, this Square Print Sale traces the paths we take across borders, through memory, and into the unknown. Presented in collaboration with The Photographers’ Gallery, the collection off ers works by artists including Martin Parr, Daidō Moriyama, Eve Arnold, Nadav Kander, Steve McCurry, Juno Calypso, Karen Knorr and more.
To coincide with Earth Day, CENTER, the nonprofit photography organization based in Santa Fe, NM, presents Elements of Wonder: When Nature Becomes Art, a photographic exhibition by Jon McCormack. The exhibition will be on view at CENTER from April 17 through May 17, 2026, with an Opening Reception on Friday, April 17, 5:00 – 7:00 PM, and an Artist Talk on April 30, from 5:30 – 6:30 PM (MT).