Catherine Opie’s “To Be Seen” and The Politics of Photography

CATHERINE OPIE: TO BE SEEN
© Catherine Opie

AB101 Demonstration, 1991, Catherine Opie. Courtesy Regen Projects, Los Angeles; Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, London, and Seoul; Thomas Dane Gallery

Catherine Opie: To Be Seen will showcase photographic portraits by the American artist Catherine Opie. The exhibition, curated in collaboration with the artist, will be the first major museum exhibition of her work in the UK.

Opie’s work questions representations of home, intimacy and family, and on a national and international level explores politics, identity and power structures.

Over the past 30 years, Opie has explored and positioned the portrait in numerous contexts and visual formats. Conceptually rigorous and formally executed, her photographs make visible queer communities, mentors and collaborators, children, surfers, high school footballers, political crowds and Opie herself, through self-portraiture.

Works featured in the exhibition will span her first major work, Being and Having (1991), her portraits of LGBTQ+ friends inspired by court painter Hans Holbein, through to her Baroque-like portraits of artists. Portraits work in dialogue with one another to create new narratives, challenging viewers to reflect on the figures most commonly portrayed in art and those who go unseen.

In addition to this exhibition, a series of interventions will place Opie’s photographs in dialogue with the permanent Collection, probing further representation in the context of the National Portrait Gallery.

Event Information
Start Date: March 5, 2026
End Date: May 31, 2026
City: London
Venue: National Portrait Gallery

CATHERINE OPIE: TO BE SEEN