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Tuesday, June 10, 2025 |
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Denver Art Museum presents photography exhibition What We've Been Up To: Landscape |
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John Ganis, Beach Houses after Hurricane Sandy, 959 East Avenue, Mantoloking, New Jersey, from the series, March 2013. Inkjet print; 22 x 33 inches. Denver Art Museum: Funds from Larry Rothman, 2022.5. © John Ganis.
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DENVER, CO.- The Denver Art Museum opened What Weve Been Up To: Landscape, a unique selection of photographs that have never been shown to the public, chosen from the DAMs Photography departments collection since it was established in 2008. The show features acquisitions from the past 17 years that have never been shared with visitors, on view from June 8 to Dec. 7, 2025, in the Photography galleries on level six of the museums Martin Building and included with general admission.
The word landscape means different things to different people, and its no surprise that it means different things to different photographers as well. This exhibition represents the variety of ways that landscape photographs help us see and appreciate other times and places and consider where the world has been and what it is becoming. Ultimately, these pictures are invitations to see ourselves and our surroundings with fresh eyes, said Eric Paddock, Curator of Photography at the Denver Art Museum.
Photographs in the exhibition are informally organized by theme or subject matter, such as Meghann Riepenhoffs large camera-less image of water and ice, flanked by photographs of rivers and oceans by artist Masao Yamamoto and others. Intimate photographs of nature include works by Linda Conner and Terri Weifenbach as well as a hypnotically detailed tableau by Tanya Marcuse. Landscapes by Christina Fernandez, Patrick Nagatani and Zora J. Murff confront troubling conflicts in our collective history. Americas scenic beauty is celebrated in works by Marion Post Wolcott, William Henry Jackson, Mary Peck and Abelardo Morell. Steve Fitchs photograph of a radio tower announces the near-universal presence of technology. Challenges of living in a changing, unpredictable world are the subject of photographs by John Ganis, Frank Gohlke and others, while Henry Wessel, Jr. evokes the easy pleasures of road trips.
Other pictures show more troubling aspects of the North American landscape, from the effects of natural disasters to dark moments in the history of slavery and conflicts with Indigenous people. All are bound together by the idea that landscape can serve as an autobiography of the people, societies and natural forces that shape the world over time.
In conjunction with this exhibition, Terri Weifenbach will be giving an Anderman Photography Lecture on Sept. 30, 2025, from 6 p.m. 7 p.m. in the Sharp Auditorium on the lower level of the Hamilton Building.
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