Exhibition: ‘Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body’ at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ

Exhibition dates: 24th January – 28th June, 2026

Curator: Emilia Mickevicius, Norton Family Assistant Curator of Photography at the Phoenix Art Museum

 

Claire A. Warden (Canadian) 'Genetics' Nd

 

Claire A. Warden (Canadian)
Genetics
Nd
From the series Mimesis (2015-ongoing)
Cameraless Photograph
© Claire A. Warden 

 

 

Surrounded by mirrors

” … the human body does not exist and is not understandable apart from the ‘social construction of reality’.”

~ Ted Polhemus

 

Embodiment is the fundamental condition we share.

~ Embodiment refers to the representation or expression of an abstract idea, quality, or feeling in a tangible, visible, or physical form. It describes a person, action, or object that perfectly exemplifies a concept. (Cambridge Dictionary)

~ At its core, the word stems from the root “embody,” meaning “to give a body to”. Philosophically, it refers to the condition of a subject (like a person) inhabiting or being associated with a physical form. (Oxford Academic)

Giving form to the intangible

~ Embodiment links together both broadly cultural and circumstantial usages, the body taking on its meaning at the intersection of narrative, culture, and social interaction… Nowadays, with the current interest in lived experience and embodiment, we assume that some level of cultural meaning is implied in pre-reflection as well. (Cambridge English Corpus)

~ Pre-reflection describes an implicit, automatic awareness that accompanies human experience before you pause to consciously analyse or think about what you are doing. It is an unmediated, “in-the-moment” state of being. (Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy)

~ In continental philosophy – most notably the work of Jean-Paul Sartre and Edmund Husserl – pre-reflective consciousness is the immediate, tacit knowledge that an experience is happening to you.

When you are in the zone, as the energy flows through you, in the background you are implicitly aware of taking a photograph – but not in a reflective state, “I have taken a photograph”.

For me, there is a union of mindfulness, body, subject, camera – a seeming suspension of time and space – which may lead to a “revelatio”, a revelation of spirit, a pulling back of the curtain to reveal what is beyond. As a good friend and fellow photographer Frank Vic observes, “To emerge from “the dreams of omniscience and omnipotence” is to let go of the photographer’s intense desire for control and egoistic attachment. Only by facing the subject with an attitude of utmost humility is it possible for the lens to capture a truly objective and sacred “revelation”.”

In modern psychology, the pre-reflective unconscious refers to how your personal history, organising principles, and mental schemas shape your experience without you actively noticing it (Encyclopaedia.com). Thus, it is how aware you are of your surroundings, how informed you are through your conversations and reading, how attuned you are to the energy of the body and the world – that directs your gaze.

Some pertinent quotations below.

Dr Marcus Bunyan

PS. The exhibition is divided into four interesting thematic sections – Surface Tension; Kinetic Beauty; Know Thyself; Enduring. Such a pity there are not more photographs to illustrate the many ideas contained within each section.


Many thankx to the Phoenix Art Museum for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

 

 

“The faculty to think objectively is reason; the emotional attitude behind reason is that of humility. To be objective, to use one’s reason, is possible only if one has achieved and attitude of humility, if one has emerged from the dreams of omniscience and omnipotence which one has as a child.”


Erich Fromm. The Art of Loving. London: Allen and Unwin, 1957, p. 120.

 

” … the human body does not exist and is not understandable apart from the ‘social construction of reality’. Our bodies and our perception of them constitute an important part of our socio-cultural heritage. They are not simply objects which we inherit at birth, but are socialized (enculturated) throughout life and this process of collectively sanctioned bodily modification may serve as an important instrument for our socialization (enculturation) in a more general sense. That is, in learning to have a body, we also begin to learn about our ‘social body’ – our society.”


Ted Polhemus. Social Aspects of the Human Body. Penguin: Harmonsworth, 1978, p. 21 quoted in Morag MacSween. Anorexic Bodies: A Feminist and Sociological Perspective on Anorexia Nervosa. London: Routledge, 1993, p. 115.

 

“Consumer capitalism, with its efforts to standardise consumption and to shape tastes through advertising, plays a basic role in furthering narcissism. The idea of generating an educated and discerning public has long since succumbed to the pervasiveness of consumerism, which is a ‘society dominated by appearances’. Consumption addresses the alienated qualities of modern social life and claims to be their solution: it promises the very things the narcissist desires – attractiveness, beauty and personal popularity – through the consumption of the ‘right’ kinds of goods and services. Hence all of us, in modern social conditions, live as though surrounded by mirrors; in these we search for the appearance of an unblemished, socially valued self.”


Anthony Giddens. Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age. California: Stanford University Press, 1991, p. 172.

 

 

Installation view of the exhibition 'Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body' at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January - June, 2026 showing Claire A. Warden 'Genetics' Nd

 

Installation view of the exhibition Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January – June, 2026 showing Claire A. Warden’s photograph Genetics Nd (above) from the series Mimesis (2015-ongoing)

 

Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body

Each of us moves through the world in a body. Though we are marked by differences in our appearances, abilities, and lived experience, embodiment is the fundamental condition we share. Our bodies both empower and limit us: these vessels hold our joy and suffering, our pleasure and pain. They withstand pressure, scrutiny, and change. Through our bodies we confront the edges of our strength, what is in our control and what is not, and the gaps between how we see ourself and how we are perceived. Bodies are sites of contradiction.

Spanning 150 years of images making, and spotlighting several Arizona based artists, this exhibition explores how artists use photography to grapple with bodily existence in all its dimensionality. The camera is a powerful tool for taking an unflinching look at ourselves and others: examining the body’s surface and physicality, suspending its form in motion, and considering how it bears traces of all we endure, from birth to death and everything in between. As a time-based medium, photography is uniquely poised to incrementally record our continuous physical transformation.

Wall text from the exhibition (in the image above)

 

Mimesis is an ongoing series of large-scale cameraless, abstract photographs that explore identity, representation, resistance, and Opacity.

Mimesis is an ongoing series that engages identity, representation, and language through abstraction and experimental image-making. The creation of this work comes at a time when the struggle to accept the unfamiliar or unkown is pervasive in American culture. When looking at much of my work, the urge to ask “what is it?” echoes the question, “what are you?” – a question directed to me countless times as a person of colour with a diverse ethnocultural heritage and one I increasingly tend to resist. That resistance carries through the work as resistance to definition as well as the hegemonic gaze and, instead, emphasizes Opacity and illegibility. These concepts, informed by anti-essentialism and decolonial theory, ultimately make way for my experimental image-making practice as mode to subvert the problematics of representation in photography, particularly in addressing experiences had by people of color. 

For this reason, I believe it is important to know that the Mimesis series is photographic – cameraless photographs – and that I developed a cameraless process that uses saliva to break down the emulsion of film. What is left is metallic silver and my biologic matter – thus exploring photographic materiality, identity formation, and illegibility. These works of self-portraiture do not show a viewer what I look like but are built from my DNA and shaped by my experiences.

Text from the PhMuseum website. Used under fair use conditions for the purposes of education and research

 

About the exhibition

Drawn primarily from the collections of the Center for Creative Photography and Phoenix Art Museum, Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body showcases a wide range of historical and contemporary works that explore the ways photographers have represented the human figure and bodily experiences of movement, aging, disability, and more.

Featured works demonstrate how artists have grappled with physicality, dimension, beauty, form, and the politics of the body in the landscape and urban environment. Subjects are presented in the context of growing older, sports, and abstraction, offering audiences the opportunity to consider the body’s ability to morph and bear traces of lived experiences.

Text from the Phoenix Art Museum website

 

Installation view of the exhibition 'Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body' at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January - June, 2026 showing at right, Richard Avedon 'Esther Blackmon, sideshow performer, Sidney, Iowa, August 12, 1979' (1979)

 

Installation view of the exhibition Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January – June, 2026 showing at right, Richard Avedon Esther Blackmon, sideshow performer, Sidney, Iowa, August 12, 1979 (1979, below)

 

Surface Tension

How much can you learn about another person by looking at them? Our bodies are the interface between ourselves and the world, but there is often a gap between our exterior presentation and our inner lives. A photograph grants us the license to study someone’s appearance longer than is socially acceptable during real-time interactions, though the viewer must still draw conclusions from what is outwardly visible.

The photographs in this section probe this tension between exteriority and interiority, showcasing what is lost and gained in translating the body’s physicality in the flat plane of an image. By abstracting the body, photographs can help us see the human form anew. Many of these pictures show how skin signifies aesthetic, cultural, and social meanings, even functioning as a canvas for self-expression.

Wall text from the exhibition

 

Richard Avedon (American, 1923-2004) 'Esther Blackmon, sideshow performer, Sidney, Iowa, August 12, 1979' 1979 (installation view)

 

Richard Avedon (American, 1923-2004)
Esther Blackmon, sideshow performer, Sidney, Iowa, August 12, 1979 (installation view)
1979
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona
Richard Avedon Archive
Gift of the artist

 

Photographs of people can both exploit and empower. The power dynamic of a portrait involves not only the interaction between the photographer and subject, but also the viewer’s projections, assumptions and interpretation. Resisting others’ projections of shame about her appearance, Esther Blackmon proclaimed: “I live a normal and happy life.” Born in North Carolina, Blackmon (1926-2003) lived with a hereditary skin disease called ichthyosis which caused dryness and baldness. This unique aspect of her phenotype earned her the nickname “The Alligator Girl.” Actively participating in the carnival industry for 56 years, Blackmon regarded herself with pride. “People born unusual are not freaks … I’d say they are very special people.”

Wall text from the exhibition

 

Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991) 'Lipkind 33' 1960

 

Aaron Siskind (American, 1903-1991)
Lipkind 33
1960
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Aaron Siskind Archive
© Aaron Siskind Foundation 

 

Installation view of the exhibition 'Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body' at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January - June, 2026 showing at left, Leon Borensztein 'Woman with Tattoo, San Francisco' (1984); at second left bottom, Stephen Marc, 'Untitled' (2017); and at third right bottom, Diane Arbus 'Tattooed Man at a Carnival, Md.' (1970)

 

Installation view of the exhibition Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January – June, 2026 showing at left, Leon Borensztein Woman with Tattoo, San Francisco (1984, below); at second left bottom, Stephen Marc, Untitled (2017, below); and at third right bottom, Diane Arbus Tattooed Man at a Carnival, Md. (1970, below)

 

Leon Borensztein (American, b. 1947) 'Woman with Tattoo, San Francisco' 1984

 

Leon Borensztein (American, b. 1947)
Woman with Tattoo, San Francisco
1984
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Purchase
© Leon Borensztein 

 

Stephen Marc (American, b. 1954) 'Untitled' 2017

 

Stephen Marc (American, b. 1954)
Untitled
2017
Inkjet print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Gift of the Artist
© Stephen Marc

 

Diane Arbus (American, 1923-1971) 'Tattooed Man at a Carnival, Md.' 1970

 

Diane Arbus (American, 1923-1971)
Tattooed Man at a Carnival, Md.
1970
Gelatin silver print

 

Kinetic Beauty

Athletic pursuits are one form of human achievement. Photographs of the body in motion attest to a fascination with witnessing bodies at the threshold of their physical limits, accomplishing seemingly superhuman feats or embodying physical ideals. These images simultaneously chart another set of limits; the evolution of photographic technology itself. Some pictures are from an athletic context and some are not, but all arrest fluid, operatic movements of the body in a way that was previously inaccessible to real-time vision. Shutter speeds reached 1/1000th of a second by the end of the 19th century and continued to shorten, enabling photographers to dissect instantaneous components of complex motions. “Seeing” faster than the eye can perceive, the camera revealed new dimensions of bodily grace, strength, and power.

Wall text from the exhibition

 

Installation view of the exhibition 'Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body' at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January - June, 2026 showing at top left, Charles "Teenie" Harris 'New York Cubans' (1941); at bottom left, Eadweard J. Muybridge 'Animal Locomotion, Plate 521: A: Walking, B: Ascending a Step, C: Throwing the Disc, D: Using a Shovel, E: Using a Pick, 1884-85' (1887); at second left, Harold Edgerton 'Golf Drive by Densmore Shute, 1938' (1938); at centre left, Terrell Groggins 'Gabriels and Shields Square Up Round 1' (2018); at centre right, Walter Iooss 'Michael Jordan, Phoenix at Chicago, 1933' (1933); and at far right, Robert Mapplethorpe 'Lisa Lyon' (1983)

 

Installation view of the exhibition Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January – June, 2026 showing at top left, Charles “Teenie” Harris New York Cubans (1941, below); at bottom left, Eadweard J. Muybridge Animal Locomotion, Plate 521: A: Walking, B: Ascending a Step, C: Throwing the Disc, D: Using a Shovel, E: Using a Pick, 1884-85 (1887, below); at second left, Harold Edgerton Golf Drive by Densmore Shute, 1938 (1938, below); at centre left, Terrell Groggins Gabriels and Shields Square Up Round 1 (2018, below); at centre right, Walter Iooss Michael Jordan, Phoenix at Chicago, 1933 (1933, below); and at far right, Robert Mapplethorpe Lisa Lyon (1983)

 

Charles "Teenie" Harris (American, 1908-1998) 'New York Cubans' 1941

 

Charles “Teenie” Harris (American, 1908-1998)
New York Cubans
1941
Gelatin silver print

 

New York Cubans baseball player Horacio Martinez leaping above third base at Forbes Field

 

Eadweard J. Muybridge (English, 1830-1904) 'Animal Locomotion, Plate 521: A: Walking, B: Ascending a Step, C: Throwing the Disc, D: Using a Shovel, E: Using a Pick, 1884-85' 1887

 

Eadweard J. Muybridge (English, 1830-1904)
Animal Locomotion, Plate 521: A: Walking, B: Ascending a Step, C: Throwing the Disc, D: Using a Shovel, E: Using a Pick, 1884-85
1887
Collotype
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Purchase 

 

Eadweard J. Muybridge (English, 1830-1904) 'Animal Locomotion, Plate 521: A: Walking, B: Ascending a Step, C: Throwing the Disc, D: Using a Shovel, E: Using a Pick, 1884-85' 1887 (detail)
Eadweard J. Muybridge (English, 1830-1904) 'Animal Locomotion, Plate 521: A: Walking, B: Ascending a Step, C: Throwing the Disc, D: Using a Shovel, E: Using a Pick, 1884-85' 1887 (detail)

 

Eadweard J. Muybridge (English, 1830-1904)
Animal Locomotion, Plate 521: A: Walking, B: Ascending a Step, C: Throwing the Disc, D: Using a Shovel, E: Using a Pick, 1884-85 (details)
1887
Collotype
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Purchase 

 

Harold Edgerton (American, 1903-1990) 'Golf Drive by Densmore Shute, 1938' 1938

 

Harold Edgerton (American, 1903-1990)
Golf Drive by Densmore Shute, 1938
1938
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Purchase
© Harold Edgerton, MIT, courtesy of Palm Press Inc.

 

Terrell Groggins (American) 'Gabriels and Shields Square Up Round 1' 2018, printed 2021

 

Terrell Groggins (American)
Gabriels and Shields Square Up Round 1
2018, printed 2021
Inkjet print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Center for Creative Photography Photojournalism Fund
© Terrell Groggins My Art My Rules

 

Walter Iooss (American, b. 1943) 'Michael Jordan, Phoenix at Chicago, 1993' 1993

 

Walter Iooss (American, b. 1943)
Michael Jordan, Phoenix at Chicago, 1993
1993
Inkjet print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Gift of Rajesh B. Patel
© Walter Iooss 

 

 

This winter, Phoenix Art Museum presents Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body, an exploration of the ways in which photographers across history have represented and reckoned with the human body and its associated dimensionality, evolution, and politicization. Drawn primarily from the collection of the Center for Creative Photography (CCP) at the University of Arizona in Tucson, along with select works from the PhxArt Collection and those by Arizona- based contemporary artists, the exhibition showcases more than 80 wide-ranging works that contend with the body’s form, physicality, and limits. Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body will be on view at PhxArt from January 24, 2026, through June 28, 2026.

“Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body offers a view into the human experience that is both compelling and relatable,” said Jeremy Mikolajczak, the Sybil Harrington Director and CEO of Phoenix Art Museum. “From sports imagery and self-portraiture to abstract compositions, this exhibition considers all aspects of the body in every stage of evolution. We are excited to once again work with the Center for Creative Photography to present a captivating collection of photographic works, shown in conversation with new acquisitions to the Phoenix Art Museum Collection by contemporary voices.”

Spanning works captured from the 19th century through the present, Muscle Memory offers a compelling look at the dynamism of the human body with works by artists such as:

John Gutmann • Richard Avedon • Brian Weil • Lauren Greenfield • Rosalind Fox Solomon • Anne Noggle • Frances Murray • Walter Iooss • Diane Arbus • Manuel Álvarez Bravo • Imogen Cunningham • Arno Rafael Minkkinen • Roy DeCarava • Harold Edgerton • Aaron Siskind • Charles “Teenie” Harris • W. Eugene Smith • Leon Borensztein • Jan Groover • Ittetsu Morishita • John Coplans • Robert Mapplethorpe • Eadweard J. Muybridge • Graciela Iturbide • Barbara Crane • Nan Goldin • William Camargo • Marcus Chormicle • Mehrdad Mirzaie • Claire A. Warden • Zhang Huan

The exhibition’s works are presented across four thematic sections that offer varying views on embodiment and how our bodies at once empower and limit us. Surface Tension considers skin as a surface and what is possible to know about a person by looking at them, including how a subject’s outward appearance can exist in tension with their interiority. Works in this section by artists such as Diane Arbus and John Gutmann spotlight individuals who have changed their outward appearance with tattoos, makeup, and other markings, exploring the human impulse to use the body as a canvas for personal expression.

Kinetic Beauty features the body in motion, with a specific focus on sports imagery. It explores how bodies interact and take shape in athletic settings, particularly those that require high levels of physical performance, endurance, and even contortion. Works in this section include images of bodybuilders by Robert Mapplethorpe and Brian Weil and a photograph by Walter Iooss featuring Michael Jordan and Charles Barkley, as well as abstract studies of bodily motion associated with physical training, strength, and aspiration.

Know Thyself highlights the work of photographers who have used the medium of photography, often in the form of serial self-portraiture, to grapple with issues of aging, beauty standards, and self-image. Featured artists in this section include John Coplans, Lauren Greenfield, Anne Noggle, and Rosalind Fox Solomon.

Enduring presents works by Nan Goldin, Ittetsu Morishita, Marcus Chormicle, and others depicting the body as witness and at its physical limits, whether due to physical exertion, illness, injury, or even death and absence, prompting viewers to consider the concepts of endurance and survival.

“Muscle Memory invites audiences to consider the body’s ability to morph in response to and bear traces of lived experience, while also discovering how photographers have used the medium as a tool for self- knowledge and exploration,” said Emilia Mickevicius, the Norton Family Assistant Curator of Photography at Phoenix Art Museum and the Center for Creative Photography. “Works by living Arizona-based artists Claire A. Warden, Mehrdad Mirzaie, Marcus Chormicle, and Anh-Thuy Nguyen infuse the presentation with contemporary perspectives on the body’s legibility, how it holds memory, and how it becomes a site of negotiation between selves and others, both extending and departing from the concerns of the historical works in the exhibition.”

Press release from the Phoenix Art Museum

 

Installation view of the exhibition 'Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body' at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January - June, 2026 showing at left, Robert Mapplethorpe 'Lisa Lyon' (1983); and at second right, a group of photographs by John Coplans

 

Installation view of the exhibition Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January – June, 2026 showing at left, Robert Mapplethorpe Lisa Lyon (1983); and at second right, a group of photographs by John Coplans

 

Installation view of the exhibition 'Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body' at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January - June, 2026 showing at right, a group of photographs by John Coplans

 

Installation view of the exhibition Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January – June, 2026 showing at right, a group of photographs by John Coplans

 

John Coplans (British, 1920-2003) 'Self-Portrait (Back with Arms Above)' 1984

 

John Coplans (British, 1920-2003)
Self-portrait (Back with arms above)
1984
Gelatin silver print

 

John Coplans (British, 1920-2003) 'Feet, Frontal' 1984

 

John Coplans (British, 1920-2003)
Feet, Frontal
1984
Gelatin silver print

 

Know Thyself

From toxic beauty standards to agism, pressures to conform, and the pathologising of non-formative identities and lifestyles, cultural messaging interrupts the journey to self-acceptance. The pictures in this section speak to finding a home in one’s body and moving between comfort and discomfort along the way. A particular focus here is serial self-portraiture where photographers train the lens on their own bodies as they reckon with aging. Facing themselves with tender curiosity and vulnerability, they wield the camera as a tool of self-knowledge, confronting their mortality and even revealing in erotic joy. Their pictures suggest the transformative power being seen on one’s own terms.

Wall text from the exhibition

 

Installation view of the exhibition 'Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body' at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January - June, 2026 showing photographs by Rosalind Fox Solomon

 

Installation view of the exhibition Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January – June, 2026 showing photographs by Rosalind Fox Solomon

 

Rosalind Fox Solomon (American, 1930-2025) 'New York, NY' 1986

 

Rosalind Fox Solomon (American, 1930-2025)
New York, NY
1986
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Rosalind Solomon Archive
© Rosalind Solomon, all rights reserved

 

Rosalind Fox Solomon described photography as a way of “talking about myself.” For five decades Solomon traversed continents documenting expressions of joy, suffering and spirituality across cultures. Simultaneously, she maintained a consistent practice of self-portraiture. In these pictures Solomon looks frankly at her aging body and evolving self, conveying both empathy and self-estrangement. Photographs of nude older women are still taboo today – a product of a culture that values youth as well as images that are conventionally “flattering” – but Solomon’s photographs suggest the power in embracing and representing what is real.

Wall text from the exhibition

 

Rosalind Fox Solomon (American, 1930-2025) 'Rotterdam (Hotel), Netherlands' 1986

 

Rosalind Fox Solomon (American, 1930-2025)
Rotterdam (Hotel), Netherlands
1986
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Rosalind Solomon Archive
© Rosalind Solomon, all rights reserved 

 

Manuel Alvarez Bravo (Mexican, 1902-2002) 'Obrero en huelga, asesinado' (Striking Worker, Assassinated) 1934

 

Manuel Alvarez Bravo (Mexican, 1902-2002)
Obrero en huelga, asesinado (Striking Worker, Assassinated)
1934
Gelatin silver print

 

Dan Young. 'My Mother's Hand on My Father's Head, 1992' 1992

 

Dan Young
My Mother’s Hand on My Father’s Head, 1992
1992
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Purchase
© Dan Young 

 

Enduring

As the saying goes, “the body keeps the score.” The photographs in this gallery explore how the body holds memory. Outwardly visible marks like scars and wrinkles are testaments to what we have survived, traces of time that resonate with the nurture of photographic images. No matter how strong or fortunate we are, each of us must sustain wounds visible and invisible, go through cycles of suffering and healing, and eventually experience death. We also inherit not only physical characteristics but also stories and trauma from our ancestors. The pictures here are reminders of our bodily fragility, but they also brim with aliveness, inspiring reverence for all that human beings have endured across generations.

 

William Camargo (American, b. 1989) 'As Far As I Can Get in 10 Seconds From The Swapmeet Parking Lot to the Liquor Store After Divola' 2020

 

William Camargo (American, b. 1989)
As Far As I Can Get in 10 Seconds From The Swapmeet Parking Lot to the Liquor Store After Divola
2020
Inkjet print
22 x 18 in.

 

Installation view of the exhibition 'Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body' at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January - June, 2026 showing at left, Roy DeCarava Force, New York (1963); at centre, George Dureau Wilbert with Hook (Nd); and at second right, William Camargo As Far As I Can Get in 10 Seconds From The Swapmeet Parking Lot to the Liquor Store After Divola (2020)

 

Installation view of the exhibition Muscle Memory: Lens on the Body at the Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, January – June, 2026 showing at left, Roy DeCarava Force, New York (1963, below); at centre, George Dureau Wilbert with Hook (Nd, below); and at second right, William Camargo As Far As I Can Get in 10 Seconds From The Swapmeet Parking Lot to the Liquor Store After Divola (2020, above)

 

Roy DeCarava (American, 1919-2009) 'Force, New York' 1963

 

Roy DeCarava (American, 1919-2009)
Force, New York
1963
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Purchase

 

A woman being arrested at a New York protest

 

George Dureau (American, 1930-2014) 'Wilbert with Hook' Nd

 

George Dureau (American, 1930-2014)
Wilbert with Hook
Nd
Gelatin silver print

 

Graciela Iturbide (Mexican, b. 1942) 'Magnolia, Juchitán, Oaxaca, México' 1986

 

Graciela Iturbide (Mexican, b. 1942)
Magnolia, Juchitán, Oaxaca, México
1986
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Purchase
© Graciela Iturbide 

 

Leon Borensztein (American, b. 1947) 'Woman with Polka Dots, San Francisco' 1984

 

Leon Borensztein (American, b. 1947)
Woman with Polka Dots, San Francisco
1984
Gelatin silver print
Center for Creative Photography
University of Arizona: Purchase
© Leon Borensztein 

 

 

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