
Reclaiming Space
In 2020 photographer Rania Matar returned to post‑explosion Beirut and found graffiti reading “Where do I go?” which became the title of her new exhibition and book, “Where Do I Go? لوي†ن†روح.” The series, shot across Lebanon from 2020‑2025, portrays women as active agents reclaiming space in abandoned factories, mansions and natural landscapes. Matar invites subjects to choose locations and poses, turning each portrait into a collaboration that challenges Western victim narratives. The show opens at Lecia Gallery in Boston (27 March‑31 April 2026) and the book releases with Kaph Books in April 2026.

Defining Freedom
Future Arts Centres and Open Eye Gallery launched "Our Freedom: Then and Now," a UK‑wide photography exhibition exploring how concepts of liberty have evolved over eight decades. The project gathered stories from 60 community‑led initiatives, captured by 22 photographers who...

Portraits of Human Connection
Emmet Gowin’s new exhibition, *Baldwin Street: Photographs 1966‑1994*, opens at Pace Gallery in New York, showcasing three decades of intimate family portraits taken on his childhood street in Virginia. The body of work captures everyday moments—children at play, kitchen scenes,...

Reflecting Landscapes
Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo will launch a major retrospective, "Tada Minami: Still, Shimmering Light," on 29 August, showcasing over 70 paintings, sculptures, lighting installations, architectural works and photographs. The exhibition traces Minami’s seven‑decade career, from early composite iron‑plastic pieces...

Can Love Be A Photograph: Forty Years of Inez & Vinoodh
The Kunstmuseum Den Haag is showcasing *Can Love Be A Photograph – 40 Years of Inez & Vinoodh*, a thematic retrospective that spans four decades of the Dutch duo’s work. Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin pioneered digital manipulation in...

A Journey in Time
Peggy Weil's "Core Memory" exhibition at MoMA showcases video installations "88 Cores" and "18 Cores" that visualize Greenland ice cores and Salton Sea rock cores. The works descend two miles through 110,000 years of ice and reveal Pleistocene strata, turning...