MUNICH.- Theres something quietly powerful about the way American photographer Jeff Dunas looks at people. No grand gestures, no spectaclejust presence. That sensibility is now on full display in Munich, where American Pictures & State of the Blues opened yesterday at Amerikahaus Munich.
The exhibition, which runs through July 31, offers a deeply human portrait of the United Statesone that feels both intimate and expansive at the same time.
A country seen through its people
At the heart of the show is American Pictures, a long-running body of work Dunas has developed over decades. Rather than chasing iconic landmarks or dramatic moments, he turns his lens toward ordinary encounterspeople standing still, waiting, thinking, simply existing.
These photographs move at a different rhythm. They are quiet, almost restrained, yet they linger. A face in a small town, a figure on the edge of a city, a fleeting glanceeach image feels like a fragment of a larger story.
What emerges is a portrait of America that resists clichés. It is diverse, layered, and constantly in motion. Different social realities and cultural backgrounds coexist within the frame, revealing a country shaped less by headlines and more by lived experience.
Beyond nostalgia: images that speak to the present
Many of the photographs were taken years ago, even decades. And yet, walking through the exhibition, they feel strikingly current.
Thats part of Dunas strength. His work doesnt lock itself into a specific moment in time. Instead, it captures something more enduring: the complexity of identity, the tension between individuality and community, and the quiet dignity of everyday life.
In a moment when conversations about America often revolve around politics and division, these images offer another entry pointone grounded in empathy.
The sound of America in black and white
The exhibition takes on a different tone in its second section, State of the Blues. Here, Dunas turns to portraiture, focusing on figures tied to one of Americas most influential cultural traditions.
Rendered in rich black and white, these photographs feel more direct, more intense. The faces carry historyof struggle, resilience, and creativity. The blues, as the exhibition suggests, is not just music; its a language shaped by experience, particularly within African American history.
Dunas captures that weight without dramatizing it. The result is a series of portraits that feel both personal and collective, connecting individual lives to a broader cultural legacy.
A space for reflection and dialogue
With this exhibition, Amerikahaus Munich continues its tradition of fostering transatlantic dialogue. But instead of offering a didactic narrative, the show invites something more open-ended.
Visitors are encouraged to look, pause, and reflectto consider what defines a society, how culture is formed, and how identity is constantly negotiated.
In the end, American Pictures & State of the Blues is less about explaining America than about experiencing it. Through faces, gestures, and moments of stillness, Dunas offers a reminder: a nation is not just an ideait is its people.