Highlights: Photography Collection
About the Photography Collection
The Cincinnati Art Museum photography collection spans the history of the medium, from early daguerreotypes and salt paper prints to photographs by contemporary artists working on several continents now. The photography department also stewards an open-access photobook collection and the archive of American photographer Nancy Rexroth.
The museum collected its first photographs in 1899; photography was recognized as a collecting focus in 1974 and established as an independent department in 2008. Building on strengths in nineteenth and twentieth-century American photography and in contemporary practices, today’s photography department is focused on adding new perspectives to the stories the collection can tell, and on making distinctive contributions to photography history and curatorial practice. The collection features a growing representation of works by artists of color, by female-identified and LGBTQ+ artists, and of the practice of photography in South Asia—especially India. In 2019, the museum announced the formation of The Nancy Rexroth Collection, an unparalleled resource for study and appreciation of the American photographer known for her groundbreaking photobook, Iowa.
The photography department regularly produces original research leading to exhibitions, publications, and commissions, including past projects on Walker Evans, American color photography, the Lexington Camera Club, James Welling, Doug and Mike Starn, and Jochen Lempert, as well as recent collaborations with Gillian Wearing, Sohrab Hura, John Edmonds, and David Hartt.