Past Exhibition

Ways of Seeing: Four Photographic Collections

Anthony O’Brien, Untitled (Portrait of a young girl), 2013, pigment print, 20 x 16 in. Promised gift of Caroline and William Burnett.

Art collectors are often said to have “a good eye” for pictures, but what does that really mean? This selection of photographs from three collections recently donated to the museum and one promised gift illustrates a variety of approaches to choosing works of art and assembling a collection. United by a passion for photography, each collector brings a distinctive sensibility to the undertaking. Artist Jamie Brunson and her former husband Mark Levy gravitated to large color photographs of the 1990s that reflect their interest in social justice and meditation. Photographer and photo dealer Don Moritz amassed a large collection of that included a group of prints by David Michael Kennedy. New Yorker W.M. Hunt was attracted to images of people whose eyes are not readily visible and searched internationally for decades to build a unique holding on that theme. Santa Fe collectors Caroline Burnett and her late husband William chose images that moved them deeply, ultimately creating a collection largely of modernist photographs from the mid-twentieth century. On view will be suites of work from each collector, including photographs by Ruth Bernhard, Edward Burtynsky, Harry Callahan, Adam Fuss, David Michael Kennedy, Minor White, and more.

Press

“Photography in NMMoA’s new exhibit reflects the eye of the beholder” – Pasatiempo, Santa Fe New Mexican, January 9, 2024

 

My Life As a Collector

 

To view more artworks from this exhibition visit our online collections here