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.
Artist Emily Hanako Momohara worked with a team of youth apprentices to make artwork for and about the community at the Academy of World Languages and Health Hub. The satelite exhibition for this collaboration is on view at Washington Park.
In Clouding Judgements, artist Joel Armor examines his personal collection of cell phone photos and calls on individuals from the surrounding community to examine their own.
Louis Joyner’s archives of black-and-white documentary photographs taken in Memphis, Tennessee from 1968–1971 act as a visual time capsule of a by-gone era.
Students create a photo-based mural in Covington after learning and practicing the art of photography.
Taking it to the Streets features large-scale images, displayed in downtown storefronts, of Cincinnati’s most celebrated events. This public art project is a collaboration between Downtown Cincinnati Inc. and photographer J. Miles Wolf.
Spanning 35 years in the career of acclaimed photographer Wing Young Huie, this exhibition collectively reflects the cultural complexities of American society.
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.
Remembering 1975–1980 is a collection of prints by PJ Sturdevant created using the traditional Bromoil process between 1975 and 1980 on 35mm film.
A juried exhibition of photographs by local artists illuminating America’s interior regions, an often-overlooked bastion of cultural, social, political, and economic vitality.