EXPOSED: Voyeurism, Surveillance, and the Camera since 1870
The new Exposed exhibit at the Walker Art Center sounds quite fascinating!
Exposed offers a fascinating look at pictures made on the sly, without the explicit permission of the people depicted. Investigating the shifting boundaries between seeing and spying, the private act and the public image, the exhibition reveals the myriad ways photography has brought to light the forbidden and the taboo. Homing in on sex, celebrity, violence, and surveillance, it provokes an array of uneasy questions at the intersection of both power and pleasure.
With more than 200 photographs, installations, and video pieces, Exposed includes works by “unseen photographers” as well as images both celebrated and notorious: Brassaï’s erotic “Secret Paris of the 1930s”; Weegee’s iconic photograph of Marilyn Monroe; Nick Ut’s documentary image of children fleeing napalm attacks during the Vietnam War. Pictures made by amateurs, professional journeymen, and governmental agencies are presented alongside renowned figures such as Guy Bourdin, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Philip Lorca DiCorcia, Walker Evans, Robert Frank, Nan Goldin, Lee Miller, Helmut Newton, and Man Ray. Exposed has a particular resonance in an era marked by ubiquitous surveillance and instantaneous distribution of images. Alternately shocking, illuminating, disturbing, and witty, it provides both historical and timely perspective on the tensions between the camera, art, and society.
DEAL ALERT: It’s free to visit the Walker Art Center on Thursday evenings and the first Saturday of each month!