ATLANTA, GA.- The High Museum of Art presents Photographys New Vision: Experiments in Seeing (June 13, 2025-Jan. 4, 2026), an exhibition uniting more than 100 works from the Highs robust photography collection to trace the impact of the New Vision movement from its origins in the 1920s to today. Works include century-old photographs exemplifying themes from the movement and modern and contemporary images that emphasize the relevance of current artistic and social practices as a response to the technological and cultural changes that occurred in the early 20th century.
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This exhibition provides an opportunity to illuminate photographers creativity and innovative practices, all inspired by the progression of the medium in the 1920s and 30s, said High Museum of Art Director Rand Suffolk. Many of the works are rarely on view, so it will be an exciting experience for visitors to see them and learn about photographers abilities as they reflect reality while experimenting with technique and perspective. Named by the influential German artist and teacher László Moholy-Nagy, the New Vision comprised an expansive variety of photographic exploration that took place in Europe, America and beyond in the 1920s and 1930s. The movement was characterized by its departure from traditional photographic methods. New Vision photographers foregrounded experimental techniques, including photograms, photomontages and compositions that favored extreme angles and unusual viewpoints, and these extended to movements such as surrealism and constructivism.
Experiments in Seeing features nearly 100 photographers. It also demonstrates how the New Vision movement revolutionized the medium of photography in the early 20th century in response to the great societal, economic and technological shifts spurred by the upheaval of the two World Wars. Photographs from that era by Ilse Bing, Alexander Rodchenko, Imogen Cunningham and Moholy-Nagy have been complemented by a multitude of photographs by modern and contemporary artists such as Barbara Kasten, Jerry Uelsmann, Hiroshi Sugimoto and Abelardo Morell to demonstrate the long-standing impact of the movement on subsequent generations.
The first section of the exhibition delves into experimental techniques that foreground the light-sensitive aspects of photography, followed by works created through in-camera manipulations or additions to the surfaces of the prints. Subsequent sections explore inventive methods of capturing unexpected views of the world articulated with radical angles or detailed close-ups. Other works showcase surreal approaches to subjects such as humanlike forms and bodies, the use of mirrors and doubling, and everyday scenes heightened by uncanny moments or distorted through the interplay of light, shadow and water.
Not only does the early 20th century and its art movements continue to be influential, but that time also echoes our current momentone that feels similarly consequential and innovative with the development of new emerging technologies and methods of communicating, said Maria L. Kelly, the Highs assistant curator of photography. The movements and happenings of a century ago are akin to those of today and those shown in the exhibition. There remains a desire for alternative ways to see and approach the world through art, and particularly through photography.
Photographys New Vision: Experiments in Seeing is on view in the Lucinda W. Bunnen Galleries for Photography located on the Lower Level of the Highs Wieland Pavilion.
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