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People Watching: Contemporary Photography Since 1965

Museum of Art Museum of Art

Exhibition: People Watching: Contemporary Photography Since 1965

Dates:

Location:

Center Gallery, Focus Gallery, Halford Gallery, Becker Gallery, Bernard and Barbro Osher Gallery
Through more than 120 photographs by more than four dozen leading contemporary artists, the exhibition explores the phenomenon of “people watching” as a recreational activity, an act of surveillance, a type of harassment, a sign of empathy, and a documentary form of expression.

Selected Works

a black and white photo of two seated people, in light colored garments and head coverings,in front of a striped background

untitled, ca. 1970, gelatin silver print by Malick Sidibé. Museum Purchase, Collectors’ Collaborative, in memory of Bruce MacDermid ’69, P’98, ’00. 2014.22.1

 

black and white photograph of a figure in a dress holding a hand mirror

Magnolia con espejo | Magnolia with mirror, Juchitán, 1986, gelatin silver print by Graciela Iturbide Museum Purchase, Lloyd O. and Marjorie Strong Coulter Fund. 2021.14.3

 

a panoramic photograph with a figure in a white t-shirt pointing towards the sky

Angel, 2007, c-print mounted on plexiglas by Alfredo Jaar. Archival Collection of Marion Boulton Stroud and Acadia Summer Arts Program, Mt. Desert Island, Maine. Gift from the Marion Boulton “Kippy” Stroud Foundation. 2018.10.178

 

 

A color photograph of a figure with braided hair, jewlery, and rings tassels, jewelrey  agains a green background

Demons, Tlazoteotl ‘Eater of Filth,’ p92 from Indigenous Woman, 2018, C-print mounted on Sintra, hand-painted artist frame by Martine Gutierrez. Museum Purchase, Greenacres Acquisition Fund. 2019.43

A figure in a long coat, with a feather pen in hand, leaning against a column of papers, agains a deep blue background

When The Storm Ends I Will Finish My Work, 2021, circular chromogenic print flush mounted to aluminum composite panel by Meryl McMaster. Museum Purchase, Lloyd O. and Marjorie Strong Coulter Fund. 2021.17

About

This exhibition explores the phenomenon of “people watching” as a recreational activity, an act of surveillance, a type of harassment, a sign of empathy, and a documentary form of expression. In the wake of the global pandemic of 2020, when social distancing and shelter in place orders have transformed our understanding of public space and our relationship to others, this exhibition will bring together a selection of contemporary photographs that investigate the myriad ways in which artists have represented individuals on the street, at home and at work, in the studio, and encountered during documentary or journalistic assignments.

Since the advent of photography in the nineteenth century, artists have used the camera to look at—and to look with—the human subjects in their midst. They have made a practice centered on the figure one of the medium’s leading genres. This interest in bodies in public and private space has only increased in recent decades with the development of new camera technologies and distribution systems. “People watching” is about noticing difference, but also about attempts to find common ground, an idea that is especially poignant at this historic moment.

People Watching: Contemporary Photography since 1965 will feature more than 120 photographs taken over the last sixty years by more than four dozen leading artists from around the world. It will begin to answer such fundamental questions as “Why do we photograph other people, and ourselves?”, “What are the different types of looking?”, and “What role have contemporary photographers played in both furthering and challenging prevailing assumptions about how we understand each other?” All works in the exhibition are from the Permanent Collection of the ϳԹվ College Museum of Art.

 

Major support has been provided by the Elizabeth B. G. Hamlin Fund and Steven P. Marrow ’83 and Dianne A. Pappas P’21.

 

Read the press release here.

Read the exhibition labels here.

Press

, What Will You Remember, August 10, 2023

, Portland Phoenix, July 26, 2023

, Bangor Daily News, July 5, 2023

, Musée Magazine, June 14, 2023

Installation Views