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War / Photography: Images of Armed Conflict and Its Aftermath

Friday, January 18, 2013, at 18:30

Concordia University, EV-1.605

Dmitri Baltermants (Russian, born Poland, 1912-1990). Attack-Eastern Front WWII, 1941. Gelatin silver print (printed 1960). The MFAH, gift of Michael Poulos in honor of Mary Kay Poulos at "One Great Night in November, 1997." 97.463.

Anne Wilkes Tucker

Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Anne Wilkes Tucker will examine the major themes of her current curatorial project, War / Photography: Images of Armed Conflict and Its Aftermath. This unprecedented survey, which includes works from 280 photographers in 28 countries, looks at the ways in which war and photography have been connected since photography’s first decade in the 1840s to the Libyan conflict of 2011. While the exhibition includes iconic works of war photography from news agencies, Tucker and her colleagues also drew on the archives of military libraries and museums, photographers’ files, and the private collections of retired services personnel. By focusing on themes, the exhibition shows how photographs track the progression of war: from the acts that instigate armed conflict to “the fight;” images of victory and defeat; and photographs that memorialize a war, its combatants, and its victims.  

War / Photography opened at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston in November and will be touring to the Annenberg Space for Photography, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, and the Brooklyn Museum in the course of 2013.


Anne Wilkes Tucker
is the Gus and Lyndall Wortham Curator of Photography, at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, where she founded the photography department. Tucker has curated over forty exhibitions, contributed essays to monographs and catalogues, and has published numerous articles. She has been awarded fellowships by the National Endowment for the Arts, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and the Getty Center, and she was the first recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Focus Award from the Griffin Museum of Photography in 2006. In addition to War / Photography: Images of Armed Conflict and Its Aftermath (Yale, 2012), her many edited or co-edited exhibition catalogues include Sally Mann: The Flesh and the Spirit (Aperture, 2011), Chaotic Harmony: Contemporary Korean Photography (Yale, 2009), The History of Japanese Photography (Yale, 2003), Brassaï: The Eye of Paris (Abrams, 1999), Robert Frank: New York to Nova Scotia (Little, Brown, 1986), and The Woman's Eye (Knopf, 1973).

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