50 / 50: 50 Photographs Celebrating NKU at 50
50 / 50 celebrates Northern Kentucky University’s 50th anniversary with 50 photographs from the archives alongside work from current students and faculty.
50 / 50 celebrates Northern Kentucky University’s 50th anniversary with 50 photographs from the archives alongside work from current students and faculty.
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.
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.
Digging Deep into the Archives explores how photographs and images are organized and the exceptional narratives and histories that they impart.
Iris‘s 10th anniversary exhibition recalls and constucts a heretofore non-existent archive representing the exceptional photography of regional and international artists presented over the last decade.
Clothes Encounter showcases seldom-seen images from Cincinnati’s fashion scene during the 1980s and 1990s, captured by award-winning former Cincinnati Post photojournalist Melvin Grier.
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.
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.
Carefully curated from nearly 20,000 images taken since 2014 over 20,000 miles, Jens Rosenkrantz’s Small Town and Long Views documents a personal archive that marks the time and place of extraordinary travels.
This two-person show with Tina Gutierrez with Da’Mon Butler explores cultural memories of their respective Cuban-Appalachian and African-American heritage. Gutierrez’s photographs capture the cathartic effect of Butler’s adornments on the wearer’s projected personality.