Memphis Brooks Museum of Art
October 2019
October 26, 2019–January 19, 2020
Photography in Memphis is both a celebration of and a reckoning with the history of the city through the work of fifty-six photographers. Spanning 1849 to today, the images capture places you’ve been, the people you know or wish you knew, and the events you experienced or were sorry you missed. The exhibition includes artistic, documentary, and journalistic approaches to the medium. Organized thematically—portraiture, landscape, still life, daily life, and politics—many of the photographs straddle several subjects, which speaks to the fact that they often have a dual or complicated nature.
Commemorating the city’s bicentennial and acknowledging the depth of talent inspired by or nurtured in Memphis, the exhibition presents forty-one works from the museum’s permanent collection by twenty-six artists—including the internationally recognized William Eggleston, Ernest C. Withers, and William Christenberry—alongside sixty-two works by thirty artists who live in, have left, or visited Memphis. Their images captivate, mobilize, and humanize viewers while reminding us of what makes us the same, what divides us, or how both can be possible in a single photograph.