NEW YORK, NY.- Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum is presenting Made in America: The Industrial Photography of Christopher Payne, an exhibition featuring Paynes intricately detailed photography of Americas factories. On view from Dec. 12 through Sept. 27, 2026, the exhibition brings together more than 70 large-format photographs captured by Payne over a decade-long photographic journey to learn more about the craft of both industrial and artisanal making in the United States.
Recently published in the book Made in America: The Industrial Photography of Christopher Payne (Abrams, 2023), Paynes photographs highlight the traditional craftsmanship behind the creation of musical instruments, flags, footballs and pinball machines, as well as the intricate hand processes still critical to creating the most advanced products, ranging from microchips to the Giant Magellan Telescope. The exhibition also features new photographic works not seen before, including images of a Herman Miller furniture factory in Grand Rapids, Michigan; New Balance sneakers being made in Lawrence, Massachusetts; and Alstom high-speed rail trains in Hornell, New York.
The first large-scale photography exhibition at Cooper Hewitt, Made in America showcases the design process through photography in a way that brings the object, the machine and the hand together. Paynes photographs highlight manufacturing as a timeless and fundamental function of the design process.
Paynes photographs satisfy our deep curiosity to know how things are made, revealing both the essence of the work being performed and the grace of a skilled maker who brings craft, passion and technological savvy to the process, said Susan Brown, the exhibitions curator. Through this exhibition, which has been years in the making, visitors will glimpse a world that is often hidden from view, from the New England textile mills that were among the countrys founding industries to the newest plants for building rockets, quantum computers and fusion reactors.
My photographs are a celebration of the making of things, of the transformation of raw materials into useful objects and the human skill and mechanical precision brought to bear on these materials that give them form and purpose, Payne said. They are also a celebration of teamwork and community, revealing how people of varying ages and skill levels come together to work toward a common goal.
Precision engineering and interchangeable parts are core components of mass production, and the endlessly repeating identical forms are a key visual component of industrial photography. Payne crafts photographs with aesthetic attention to the design elements of scale, form and coloroften waiting until a critical stage in the manufacturing process is reached or a particular color is being run on the production lineto achieve the most compelling composition. The objects photographed as they are made range in size from marshmallow chicks and colored pencils to tractors and jumbo jetswith the human body often serving as a visual point of reference.
Planned as part of the Smithsonians celebration of the 250th anniversary of Americas Declaration of Independence in 2026, the exhibition reveals Americas factories as sites of human ingenuity and innovation. Made in America tells a celebratory story about Americas industrial past and technological future, made by hand and machine together.
Trained as an architect, Payne (b. 1968) is fascinated by design, assembly and the built form. His latest book is Made in America (Abrams Books, 2023). Paynes earlier books include Making Steinway: An American Workplace, North Brother Island: The Last Unknown Place in New York City, Asylum: Inside the Closed World of State Mental Hospitals and New Yorks Forgotten Substations: The Power Behind the Subway. Paynes work has appeared frequently in The New York Times Magazine and in other major publications around the world, including The New Yorker, National Geographic, Scientific American, The Atlantic, Time and Wired, among many others.