Arbus, Frank, Penn: Masters of Post-War American Photography
Features the work of three iconic photographers who turned their lens on the overlooked, unseen, and ostracized subjects in society throughout the 1950s and 1960s.
Features the work of three iconic photographers who turned their lens on the overlooked, unseen, and ostracized subjects in society throughout the 1950s and 1960s.
Experience Cincinnati’s past through the literal lens of photographic advancement. From daguerreotype to the world’s best camera today, journey to see where 170 years has taken us.
A photo-based installation, Fruits of Labor critically interrogates Momohara’s family’s 100-year immigration journey from plantation laborers in Japan to mainland America.
Featuring objects from the Second World War, The Things They Kept explores how every tear, every blemish, and every mark forms both an individual and collective narrative from our shared human history.
Digging Deep into the Archives explores how photographs and images are organized and the exceptional narratives and histories that they impart.
A competitive, international exhibition of works featuring photographic and lens-based art that in one way or another, literally or figuratively, represents the concept of archive.
Featuring images of Sharonville from the perspectives of five artists, this exhibition looks at a community’s history interpreted from the past through the present.
The exhibition restages the 1929 historic encounter between Blossfeldt’s plant photographs and Bruguière’s experiments in abstract photography, and juxtaposes it with the Photograms and Negatives series by contemporary artist Thomas Ruff.
Nuclear Fallout excavates the collective memory of the bomb and asks visitors to critically consider the way war is curated and remembered. Artist Migiwa Orimo works with three different archives to develop responsive installations.
Finding Kenyon Barr: Exploring Photographs of Cincinnati’s Lost Lower West End features photographs from 1959 that illustrate the demolition of a vital and vibrant urban neighborhood that displaced nearly 25,000.