March 12 – June 26, 2022
US-American photography of the 1950s and 1960s was considered exemplary, as were the country's visual arts more generally. But when artistic photography in Europe began to strike out on its own paths in the 1980s, many younger artists no longer felt a compelling need to orient themselves toward American photography.
The large-scale exhibition True Pictures? responds to this state of affairs by presenting a more open view of contemporary photography in North America. In line with the artistic emancipation of photography in Europe, this exhibition identifies the late 1970s as a starting point for a fundamental shift in the understanding of photography in North America. The pictorial form of the large-format tableau was “invented,” used for the first time by Jeff Wall with his lightboxes. This exhibition focuses on the work of artists born between 1946 and 1989 and on the diverse, far-reaching consequences of this new understanding of photography that emerged in North America.
Snoeck-Verlag of Cologne will be bringing out a publication in German and English to accompany this exhibition.
Curators: Kerstin Stremmel, Andrea Lehner-Hagwood
A cooperation of Sprengel Museum Hannover and Museum der Moderne Salzburg
Museum der Moderne Salzburg
Mönchsberg 32
5020 Salzburg, Austria
Rupertinum
Wiener-Philharmoniker-Gasse 9
5020 Salzburg, Austria
Hours
Tue—Sun 10 am—6 pm
Wed 10 am—8 pm
During the festival season also
Mon 10 am—6 pm
Additionally open on Monday, April 11 and Easter Monday, April 18, 2022 from 10 a.m.–6 p.m.