Sunday, December 28, 2025

Show at Monroe Gallery shows how pre-social media artists immortalized themselves through photography

 Via The Albuquerque Journal

December 28, 2025

color photograph of artist Andy Warhol posing in front of "Cow Walpaper" in the Leo Castelli Gallery in NY,  1966
Steve Schapiro: Andy Warhol, Cow Wallpaper, Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, 1966


PUBLIC IMAGE AS ART

By Logan Royce Beitman

Show at Monroe Gallery shows how pre-social media artists immortalized themselves through photography

SANTA FE — I bet you can picture Pablo Picasso — bald head, striped boating shirt — but not fellow cubists Georges Braques or Juan Gris. You can probably identify pop artist Andy Warhol’s signature silver wig and black turtleneck, but what did Roy Lichtenstein and James Rosenquist look like? When it comes to the surrealists, more people recognize Salvador Dalí, who was kicked out of the movement, than André Breton, who founded it.

What did Picasso, Warhol and Dalí have in common? Besides being artists, they were celebrities — household names whose fame extended far beyond the artworld. Their media-ready personas and larger-than-life antics played into stereotypes of what people expected artists to look and act like. Picasso — part of the original European avant-garde — fancied himself a Bohemian bullfighter against mainstream society. Warhol was a Bohemian, too, with his ever-present coterie of disaffected “superstars,” but, in contrast to Picasso’s tempestuousness, Warhol was the quintessence of cool, speaking only in irony-soaked monosyllables. Dalí, for his part, played “the crazy artist,” saying outrageous things like, “I don’t do drugs; I am drugs,” and bringing a live anteater onto “The Dick Cavett Show.”

“Artists Behind the Art” at Monroe Gallery presents photographic portraits of artists — these and others. Some shots are posed, some are candid and some, purporting to show the artists at work, lie somewhere in between, with the artists enacting their signature gestures for the camera. Seeing so many photographs of artists in one room got me thinking about how photography contributed to the mythologization of many 20th century artists.

In the 19th century, even after the invention of photography, few artists turned the camera on themselves or cultivated media-ready personas. Artists like Gustave Courbet and Edgar Degas used photography mainly as a preparatory aid for their paintings, a way of capturing reality more quickly and accurately than ketching. The 21st century saw the democratization of celebrity through the internet and social media, and now anyone with a smartphone can turn themselves into a brand.

But between the 19th century, when photography was new, and the 21st, when it is everywhere, photo portraitists of the 20th century helped artists turn their faces into icons and their lives into legends.

Steve Schapiro photographed the surrealist painter Rene Magritte for LIFE magazine in 1965 at a time when the magazine reached nearly a quarter of the U.S. population.


black nd white photograph of the artist Rene Magritte sleeping on a bench in front of one of his paintings at MoMA in New York
Steve Schapiro: Rene Magritte at MOMA., 1965


The setting is Magritte’s retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Magritte and Schapiro collaborated on the shoot, brainstorming creative poses that would erase the distinction between artist and art. In one, Magritte, wearing his signature bowler hat, stands in front of “Golconda,” a painting that shows scores of men in identical hats levitating heavenward.

By cropping out the painting’s frame, shooting from a slight upward angle and using a fairly shallow depth of field that keeps the painter’s face in focus while fuzzing-out the brushstrokes, Schapiro makes it appear as though Magritte has stepped through a looking glass into the image-world of the painting.

Men around him are floating away, and he may lift off, too, at any second. In another photograph from the series, Magritte rests on a museum bench, using his bowler hat as a pillow, and “dreams” the painting behind him. Schapiro’s photographs of Magritte interacting with the paintings blur the line between reality and fiction even better than the paintings do.

The following year, Schapiro photographed Warhol in front of his “Cow Wallpaper” at the Leo Castelli Gallery. Giant pink cow heads covered the walls of the gallery’s main room, while the artist’s helium-filled “Silver Clouds” floated aimlessly in an adjoining room. The exhibition, which Warhol announced in interviews as his “farewell to painting,” paved the way for the Instagrammable, Meow Wolfstyle immersive art experiences of today. In the photo, Warhol crosses his arms and holds his left hand to his face in an oddly stylized gesture, his middle finger pressing his lip into a slight smirk. This is the image of a deadpan artist-provocateur, whose ironic self-presentation was inseparable from his art.

Schapiro has seven images in the Monroe Gallery show, while Tony Vaccaro has the most at 17. Vaccaro’s images of Georgia O’Keeffe, taken in New Mexico in 1960, reveal multiple sides of the artist. In one, O’Keeffe, standing in the desert, lifts a red and yellow “Pelvis” painting onto an easel.

The left edge of the painting nearly touches that of the photograph, and the precision of the alignment reflects O’Keeffe’s perfectionism. Visitors wishing to see that particular painting in the flesh, by the way, can walk just a few blocks to the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, where it currently hangs in the “Tewa Nangeh” exhibition. In another of Vaccaro’s photographs, O’Keeffe, riding in the backseat of a car, holds a piece of Swiss cheese to her eye. The oblong hole in the cheese mirrors the hole in the painted pelvis bone.

But if the first image makes the artist look serious, the second undercuts the O’Keeffe myth, showing her to be self-effacing and silly. But which image is more accurate?

Martha Holmes’ 1949 photographs of Jackson Pollock depict the artist dribbling paint across an unstretched canvas on his studio floor while a cigarette dangles from his lips. These widely reproduced photographs of Pollock, along with Hans Namuth’s from 1950, helped inspire the art critic Harold Rosenberg to rechristen the abstract expressionist movement “action painting” in his influential 1952 essay, “The American Action Painters,” reframing the painters’ processes, not as compositional strategies, but as dance-like physical improvisations.


black and white photograph of artists Jackson Pollock dripping paint onto a canvas on the floor of his studio in 1949
Martha Holmes/Life Picture Collection
Jackson Pollock painting in his studio, Springs, New York, 1949


Ernst Haas’ photographs of Helen Frankenthaler pouring buckets of paint onto her canvases are not as well known as Holmes’ photographs of Pollock, but they should be. The one in this show has a vertical orientation, which emphasizes the weight of the falling paint and its relationship to the artist’s body, and to gravity.

black and white photograph of artist Helen Frankenthaler pouring paint onto a canvas in her studio in NY in 1969
Ernst Haas: Helen Frankenthaler, NY, 1969

Many young artists around the world, seeing photographs like these of Frankenthaler and Pollock, came to consider the performative quality of “action painting” more important than the finished work. The result was a proliferation of performance art in the 1960s and ’70s: Gutai, Fluxus, happenings, body art, process art, the Viennese Actionists and so on.

Lucien Clergue’s portrait of Salvador Dalí from 1969 — a straight headshot — is one of the least theatrical images of Dalí I’ve ever seen. Dalí frequently collaborated with the Latvianborn photographer Philippe Halsman on outrageous artist portraits, including “Dalí Atomicus” (1948), depicting the artist leaping through the air, paintbrush in hand, alongside three live cats and a bucket of water. Clergue’s close-up headshot, taken two decades later, is the antithesis of that. Where Halsman created superhuman fictions, Clergue shows us Dalí’s tired eyes, rumpled hair and five-o’clock shadow — in other words, his human frailty.

The only 21st-century work in the show is Gabriela E. Campos’ photograph of Judy Chicago from 2023. The artist poses behind one of her “Moving Parts” sculptures — clear acrylic forms, similar to chess pieces, which rest on a translucent pink acrylic base.

Chicago’s clear blue eyeglasses and mint green sweater are reflected in the shiny, bubblegum-pink sculpture.

Although the artist has been artificially posed, the portrait reveals truths about her work, including the centrality of color and the intrinsic relationship between her sculptural forms and her body.

Alexander Calder, Annie Leibovitz, Gordon Parks, Francis Bacon and Joan Miró are among the many artists whose portraits appear in “Artists Behind the Art.”

Vaccaro has two eye-catching photographs of the art collector Peggy Guggenheim, as well. In one, she wears a flamboyant pair of sunglasses as she floats down a Venetian canal.


color photograph of Peggy Guggenheim in a blue cape in a Gondola, Venice, 1966
Tony Vaccaro: Peggy Guggenheim, Venice, 1966


Guggenheim’s public image was as bold and memorable as those of the artists whose work she collected.

The artists in “Artists Behind the Art” rarely reveal their inner lives to us. More often, they show their canniness for curated self-presentation. Such branding tactics, now ubiquitous among social media users, are ones they perfected in close collaboration with their savvy photographic portraitists. In the best of these photographs, the artists become the art. Today, millions of ordinary people do the same.


Logan Royce Beitmen is an arts writer for the Albuquerque Journal. He covers music, visual arts, books and more. You can reach him at lbeitmen@abqjournal. com.


Friday, December 26, 2025

Photographers Behind the Artists - Screening of New Documentary "Steve Schapiro Being Everywhwere"

December 26, 2025

Via Pasatiempo

black and white photograph of artist Rene Magritte in bowler hat and suit and tie standing in front of one of his paintings in the Museum of Modern Art in New York
Steve Schapiro:  Rene Magritte, MOMA, New York, 1965

EXHIBITIONISM


Photographers Behind the Artists


While we admire the work of famed and influential artists of our time, we don’t often see images of the artists themselves. The Monroe Gallery’s Artists Behind the Art exhibition gives the viewer a peek at the people behind some of the 20th century’s most iconic works, including Picasso (1881-1973), Willem de Kooning (1904-1997), Man Ray (1890-1976), Henri Matisse (1869-1954), and many more, as seen through the eyes of a select group of photographers who were granted access to the studios and work spaces, galleries, and candid moments of the artists in their elements.

On such photographer is Steve Schapiro (1934-2022), whose work is part of the exhibition and who didn’t just capture high-profile artists and celebrities in his portfolio, he also bore witness to significant moments in American and civil rights history, a particular focus of his.

Some of those images are part of the exhibition, and in addition, the gallery is hosting two special screenings of the new documentary Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere at Sky Cinemas on Monday, December 29, and Tuesday, December 30. Both screenings will be followed by a Q&A with filmmaker Maura Smith, moderated by Michelle and Sid of Monroe Gallery. — B.S.

Artists Behind the Art; Through January 25, 2026, Monroe Gallery of Photography, 112 Don Gaspar; 505-992-0800; monroegallery.com

Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere; 7 p.m. Monday, December 29, and 5 p.m. Tuesday, December 30; Sky Cinemas, 1606 Alcaldesa Street; $16; 505-216-5678; santafe.violetcrown.com

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Save The Dates! The AIPAD Photography Show in NYC April 22 - 26, 2026 April

 

Via ArtNews

December 18, 2025


color photograph showing overhead view of booths at the 2025 AIPAD Photography Show in the Park Avenue Armory

View of the 2025 edition of AIPAD's Photography Show.
Photo Erica Price


The Association of International Photography Art Dealers (AIPAD) has named the 77 exhibitors that will participate in the upcoming edition of the Photography Show. The annual fair will return to the Park Avenue Armory in New York, running April 22–26.

This year’s fair will include a number of the world’s top photography-focused galleries, including Edwynn Houk Gallery, Yancey Richardson, Robert Mann Gallery, and Higher Pictures. First-time exhibitors, including Ruiz-Healy Art, Leica Gallery New York, and Galerie Sophie Scheidecker, will also feature in the fair.

The 2026 iteration of the fair will also focus on increasing its gender parity, per a release; a third of the exhibitors are women-led, women-founded, or both.

The fair will also introduce a new section, titled “Focal Point,” which will be dedicated to solo presentations for artists focused on lens-based photography to “showcase how artists have historically expanded our collective understanding of what photography is and how contemporary artists continue to show us what it can become,” per a release. This section of the fair will be designed by architecture firm Oficina.la.

Additionally, AIPAD will give artist, scholar, and NYU professor Deborah Willis its 2026 AIPAD Award, which will be presented during the VIP opening on April 22. A winner of both the MacArthur “Genius” Grant and a Guggenheim Fellowship, Willis joined NYU in 2000 and has chaired the Department of Photography and Imagining in the Tisch School of the Arts for nearly two decades. She is the author or editor of several landmark publications on Black photography, including Picturing Us: African American Identity in Photography (1996), Reflections in Black: A History of Black Photographers – 1840 to the Present (2000), and Posing Beauty: African American Images from the 1890s to the Present (2009).

The full exhibitor list follows below.

Main Sector


Exhibitor Location(s)
19th Century Rare Book & Photograph Shop New York, NY
Alta Anyós, Andorra
Augusta Edwards Fine Art London, UK
Bildhalle Zurich, Switzerland | Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Bruce Silverstein New York, NY
Catherine Couturier Gallery Houston, TX
Cavalier Galleries New York, NY | Greenwich, CT | Nantucket, MA | Palm Beach, FL
Charles Isaacs Photographs New York, NY
CLAMP New York, NY
Curatorial Gallery London, United Kingdom
Daniel / Oliver Gallery Brooklyn, NY
Danziger Gallery New York, NY
Deborah Bell Photographs New York, NY
Echo Fine Arts Cannes, France
Edwynn Houk Gallery New York, NY
Form. Gallery Dinard, France
Galerie Olivier Waltman Miami, FL | Paris, France
Galerie XII Los Angeles, CA | Paris, France
Galerie Esther Woerdehoff Paris, France
Galerie Sophie Scheidecker Paris, France
Gana Art Seoul, South Korea | Los Angeles, CA
Gilman Contemporary Ketchum, ID
Gitterman Gallery New York, NY
Gregory Leroy Madrid, Spain
HackelBury London, United Kingdom
Hans P. Kraus Jr. Inc. New York, NY
Higher Pictures Brooklyn, NY
Holden Luntz Palm Beach, FL
Howard Greenberg Gallery New York, NY
The Hulett Collection Tulsa, OK
IBASHO Antwerp, Belgium
Ilaria Quadrani Fine Art New York, NY

IN-DEPENDANCE by IBASHO Antwerp, Belgium
INTHEGALLERY Copenhagen, Denmark | Palma de Mallorca, Spain
Jackson Fine Art Atlanta, GA
Janet Borden Inc. Brooklyn, NY
jdc Fine Art San Diego, CA
Keith de Lellis Gallery New York, NY
LARGE GLASS London, UK
Leica Gallery New York New York, NY
Marshall Gallery Los Angeles, CA

Michael Hoppen London, United Kingdom
Michael Shapiro Photographs Westport, CT
Momentum Miami, FL
Monroe Gallery of Photography Santa Fe, NM
Nailya Alexander Gallery New York, NY
Obscura Gallery Santa Fe, NM
Paul M. Hertzmann, Inc. San Francisco, CA
POLKA Galerie Paris, France
Robert Klein Gallery Boston, MA
Robert Koch Gallery San Francisco, CA
Robert Mann Gallery New York, NY
Rolf Gallery Buenos Aires, Argentina
Ruiz-Healy Art New York, NY | San Antonio, TX
Scheinbaum & Russek Ltd. Santa Fe, NM
Scott Nichols Gallery Sonoma, CA
Staley-Wise Gallery New York, NY
Stephen Bulger Gallery Toronto, ON
Stephen Daiter Gallery Chicago, IL
Throckmorton Fine Art New York, NY
Toluca Fine Art Paris, France
Vasari Buenos Aires, Argentina
Von Lintel Gallery Los Angeles, CA
Yancey Richardson New York, NY


Focal Point Sector
Exhibitor Location(s) Artist(s)
Be Fine Art Gallery Chiayi and Taipei City, Taiwan Hsu-Pin Lee
Central Server Works Los Angeles, CA Lenard Smith
Duncan Miller Gallery Los Angeles, CA Jacqueline Woods
ELLEPHANT Montreal, Quebec, Canada JJ Levine
Glaz Gallery Moscow, Russia Zhenya Mironov
Galerie Catherine et André Hug Paris, France Susan Burnstine
L. Parker Stephenson Photographs New York, NY Ray Mortenson
LAS Contemporary Nashville, TN Chrissy Lush
M77 Gallery Milan, Italy Nino Migliori
Obscura Gallery Santa Fe, NM Paul Caponigro +
John Paul Caponigro
Roland Belgrave Vintage Photography Ltd Brighton, UK Baud Postma
SoMad New York, NY Yi Hsuan Lai
Thomas Erben Gallery New York, NY Olivia Reavey


Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Ashley Gilbertson Photographs "War at Home: A record of ICE’s assault on immigrants and the people’s resistance"

 Via Hammer and Hope

December 17, 2025


black and white photograph of man in US border Patrol vest and cowboy hat chasing people in a Chicago alley

Assistant Chief Patrol Agent David Kim runs down an alleyway after a caravan of federal agents pulled up on people in southwest Chicago, Nov. 6, 2025. Photographs by Ashley Gilbertson/VII for Hammer & Hope


The immigrant catchers, faces covered, chase the workers down the street in broad daylight. The enemy is the landscaper, the day laborer, the high school student born in Mexico, Honduras, Venezuela. In the masks and guns of the federal agents, we see the riot gear of the Ferguson cops, the billy clubs of the Alabama state troopers, the Klansman’s hood. And in the brave crowds who gather to confront them, we see the power of solidarity. --click for full article



“That was my neighbor!” the woman screamed through tears at federal agents. “He’s just my neighbor!”

I tried to talk to the woman pictured above. She gave me permission to use her photograph, but she didn’t want to provide her name. Like so many people around ICE, she’s scared. Usually the stories I work on are filled with quotes, but the feds won’t talk to the press, and neither will anyone else. --Ashley Gilbertson

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Women Photograph: 2025 Year in Pictures Features Tracy Barbutes Upside-down flag on El Capitan

 Via Women Photograph

December 15, 2025


Women Photograph is proud to share our 2025 Year in Pictures — a collection of images that once again shows us a world on the brink of political turmoil, climate crisis, and an extensive range of human-made disasters. This year’s annual retrospective takes us from Malaysia to South Sudan to Peru, from the ongoing immigration raids happening across the U.S. to efforts to control the spread of malaria in Uganda. As our planet continued to emerge from the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic and wars raged on in Ukraine and Congo, we also were buoyed by images of birth, family, celebration, and connection. This year’s Year in Pictures was curated by Women Photograph board member and former National Geographic magazine editor Elizabeth Krist — you can pre-order the 2025 Women Photograph Annual here, and donate to Women Photograph here to support our ongoing work to diversify the visual media industry.



color photograph of showing a fired park ranger and friends hang an upside-down American flag from El Capitan (Tu-Tok-A-Nu-La), a granite monolith in Yosemite National Park, Calif., on February 22, 2025



TRACY BARBUTES

A fired park ranger and friends hang an upside-down American flag from El Capitan (Tu-Tok-A-Nu-La), a granite monolith in Yosemite National Park, Calif., on February 22, 2025. This act of protest against the thousands of federal job cuts by the current administration coincided with the “firefall” event, which draws thousands of spectators and photographers annually.

The image went viral and ignited protests on public lands throughout the United States. I stood under El Cap—something I’d done hundreds of times—and as I documented the unfurling of that upside down flag, an act signaling distress, I couldn’t help but observe that we were gathered on colonized Indigenous land.

Monday, December 15, 2025

Press arrests used to silence protest coverage in 2025

Via US Press Freedom Tracker

December 15, 2025


 While covering anything from protests to government meetings, journalists in 2025 were pulled from news scenes, placed in cuffs and held in custody from minutes to days — long enough for deadlines to pass and breaking news to go cold.

As of Dec. 15, the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker has documented at least 32 instances in which journalists were detained or charged just for doing their jobs. While that count is lower than the 50 documented last year, each one is a warning flare that something fundamental is shifting in how authorities police information and those who gather it. Most were released without charges or had them quickly dropped, but the impact extends far beyond the time spent in custody.

One journalist arrested while covering a protest told the Tracker his arrest stopped the news from getting out. “Talk about putting the brakes on press freedom,” he said.

Protest beat as battleground

Protests have long been where the fault lines of press freedom are most visible, and 2025 was no different. Nearly 90% of the arrests and detentions this year occurred while journalists were covering demonstrations.

They all also centered around a single issue: immigration.  --click to read full report




Wednesday, December 3, 2025

STEVE SCHAPIRO: BEING EVERYWHERE SCREENING IN SANTA FE

 STEVE SCHAPIRO: BEING EVERYWHERE

DEC 29 & 30 · FILMMAKER Q&A





Over six decades, photographer Steve Schapiro bore witness to some of the most significant social and cultural moments in modern American history.

Monroe Gallery represents Schapiro’s historic photographs, and several are featured in the current “Artists Behind The Art” exhibition.

Shot shortly before his passing by filmmaker Maura Smith, Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere is a loving tribute to a man who was the quintessential "fly on the wall," waiting for moments to unfold and capturing them with a naturalism and skill that's nothing short of dazzling.

Sky Cinemas    (505) 216-5678

1606 Alcaldesa St. Santa Fe, NM 87501

Monday, December 29 7 PM

Tuesday, December 30  5PM


Promotional poster graphic for new documentary fild Steve Schapiro: Being Everywhere with images from film above a white couch


Wednesday, November 26, 2025

The Destinations Podcast: Healing, Art & The Sacred Power of the Jingle Dress with Eugene Tapahe

 Via Culturs


In this powerful episode of the Destinations Podcast, we sit down with Eugene Tapahe, a Navajo (Diné) artist, photographer and cultural storyteller whose work bridges healing, identity and the sacred connection to the land.

Tapahe shares his deeply moving journey growing up on the reservation, the origins of the Jingle Dress Healing Project and how Native traditions became a source of unity during COVID.

From sand installations made with soil from across the world to protecting sacred lands and preserving Indigenous identity, this conversation is an inspiring reflection on resilience, spirituality and cultural preservation.

Listen to the episode here and don’t forget to like and subscribe!

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

TIME Top 100 Photos of 2025; includes photo by Mark Peterson

 Via TIME

November 25, 2025


We stand at scenic overlooks and lift our lens to capture a post card view that, of course, looks better on a postcard. It’s not about gear, or the 10,000 hours. It’s simply that almost any photograph is improved by having people in it—a lesson TIME’s Top 100 Photographs of 2025 underscores in images that capture not only a year, but also the faint but discernable shadow cast by a less human future.

The moments photojournalists document tend to be most visible on faces: the panic of a fallen runner about to be spiked, the anguish in an immigrant in a headlock, a smiling Buddha toppled in a quake. Robots (in a footrace, at a bedside) serve as comic relief partly because they have no faces. But, as machines, they carry the same ambiguous edge as artificial intelligence. In Ahmedabad, the tail section of an Air India flight juts from a building like a paper airplane that sailed in and stuck. And in Portland, Ore., sworn agents of the United States government all but disappear inside red smoke, body armor and gas masks. — Karl Vick


color photograph of New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani talks to the press and meets with supporters at a park in Midtown Manhattan, on Oct. 28 2025
New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani talks to the press and meets with supporters at a park in Midtown Manhattan, on Oct. 28. Mark Peterson—Redux

Sunday, November 23, 2025

New Exhibition: Artists behind The Art

color photograph of artists Alexander Caler in a red shirt standing with one of his mobiles in France, 1957
Tony Vaccaro: Alexander Calder, France, 1957

 


Monroe Gallery of Photography announces a new exhibit “Artists Behind The Art”. The exhibition opens with a public reception Friday, November 28 from 5 – 7 pm, and you can kick off the Holiday Season at the Holiday Plaza Lighting!

The exhibit continues through January 25, 2026.

Many of the most influential artists of the past century are, in a sense, unseen. This exhibition shows us the human beings behind some of the 20th century's most vital works of art. The photographs range from posed, candid, and working shots to behind the scenes of artists at work. In these photographs the essential personality of the artist is revealed, and an image of the past becomes visual history.

Artists depicted in the exhibit include Richard Avedon, Francis Bacon, Alexander Calder, Judy Chicago, Willem De Kooning, Helen Frankenthaler, Rene Magritte, Henri Matisse, Henry Moore, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, Georgia O’Keeffe, Andy Warhol, Andrew Wyeth, and many more.

View the exhibition here.