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Exhibitions
Through the Looking Glass: Photography's Use of Windows, Doorways, and Mirrors

Curated by Dr. Julia Dolan, Minor White Curator of Photography. October 29, 2011-February 28, 2012.

Like the viewfinder of a camera, windows, doorways, and mirrors shape our views of the world around us. As frames appearing within photographs, they can add to an image's spatial cohesion and composition, and often serve to suggest mood and psychological depth. The current gallery rotation from the Museum’s permanent collection features more than sixty photographs that highlight the significant and intricate role that windows, doorways, and mirrors have played throughout photography's 185-year history.

In about 1826 French gentleman-scientist Joseph Nicéphore Niépce created what is considered to be the world's first photograph. The one-of-a-kind polished pewter plate, now in the collection of the Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin, is titled View from the Window at Le Gras and features an outdoor scene composed through a rear window on the upper floor of Niépce's home. Other early photography practitioners such as Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre and William Henry Fox Talbot frequently integrated windows and doorways into their images, and these compositional effects have remained prevalent and meaningful even into the digital age.

On the surface, windows and doorways are architectural apertures that permit or restrict the movement of individuals, objects, and even atmosphere; they also allow or deny views into or out of private spaces. More than mere structural boundaries, however, they can be interpreted as psychological membranes embodying the rich tension between acceptance and rejection. Similarly, the mirror has long been used in literature and art to represent concepts such as self-awareness, narcissism, mortality, and alternate realities.

As the works on view make clear, windows, mirrors, and doorways in photographs function at times as purely visual devices and at others as metaphors for substantial concepts. Whether transparent or opaque, they serve as gateways to guide viewers toward new and ever-changing territory, in both our interior and exterior worlds.

- Julia Dolan

62 Objects directly related to this Term

1996_0029_0001_02_PT.jpg
1996.29.1
Ruth Bernhard
Rain Window
1982
1996_0029_0004_PT.jpg
1996.29.4
Jack Warren Welpott
McNear Beach
1961
1997_0002_0028_PT.jpg
1997.2.28
Lily E. White
Evening on the Columbia (below Beacon Rock)
1903/1905
1998_0019_0000_PT.jpg
1998.19A
Francis Frith
Pylon Gateway at Medinet-Habu, Thebes, Egypt
1857
1998_0061_0017_PT.jpg
1998.61.17
Garry Winogrand
Boston, from the portfolio Women Are Beautiful
ca. 1970 (negative); 1981 (print)
1999_0010_0012_PT.jpg
1999.10.12
Mary Randlett
Entry to Theodore Roethke's House
1963
1999_0078_0012_PT.jpg
1999.78.12
Simon Norfolk
Cambodia: Inmates of a Torture Centre, from the series For Most of it I have No Words: Genocide, Landscape, Memory
1998
2000_0071_0002_01_PT.jpg
2000.71.2
Albert Jourdan; Alda Jourdan
Ross Island Bridge
ca. 1926
2001_0098_0001_PT.jpg
2001.98.1
Manuel Alvarez Bravo
Optical Parables
1931 (negative); 1998 (print)
2002_0018_0000_PT.jpg
2002.18
Craig Pozzi
Mexican Fiesta, Woodburn, Oregon
1987
2003_0087_0010_PT.jpg
2003.87.10
Oscar Pintor
San Juan (Home Theatre)
1980 (negative); printed later
2003_0090_0000_PT.jpg
2003.90
Alex Harris
Sole and Cuba Streets, Old Havana, Looking North from Alberta Roja's 1951 Plymouth
1998
2004_0011_0017_PT.jpg
2004.11.17
Jonathan Brand
Lower East Side, New York
1960 (negative); 2003 (print)
2004_0110_0000_PT.jpg
2004.110
Tamás Nagy
Szemfény (Light in the Eye) #2
2002
2004_0015_0001_PT.jpg
2004.15.1
Christopher Rauschenberg
Bergamo, Italy
2003
2004_0021_0000_PT.jpg
2004.21
Mark Tyler
Untitled
2004
2004_0022_0000_PT.jpg
2004.22
André Kertész
Martinque
1972
2004_0066_0022_PT.jpg
2004.66.22
Michael Kenna
Circle of Water, Marly, France
1995
2005_0002_0006_PT.jpg
2005.2.6
Edward Steichen
The Pond-Moonlight, from the journal Camera Work XIV
1906
2005_0006_0002_PT.jpg
2005.6.2
Elliott Erwitt
U.S.A., Wyoming
1955 (negative); 1975 (print)
2005_0081_0001_PT.jpg
2005.81.1
Jan Saudek
The Soul Leaves the Body
1977 (negative); 1980 (print)
2006_0028_0000_PT.jpg
2006.28
Cecilia Arboleda
Buenos Aires, Argentina
2002
2006_0041_0001_PT.jpg
2006.41.1
Robert Kiehl
Untitled (View of the Empire State Building from the Chrysler Building)
ca. 1950
2006_0084_0002_01_PT.jpg
2006.84.2
Arnold Newman
Willem de Kooning, New York City
1959
2007_0083_0000_PT.jpg
2007.83
Bea Nettles
Dock, from the series Return Trips
2001
2008_0102_0027_PT.JPG
2008.102.27
Vilem Kriz
Untitled
1948
2008_0038_0002_PT.jpg
2008.38.2
Brenda Ann Kenneally
Untitled (Michaela with Catfish), from the series Children of the Storm
2006
2008_39.bmp
2008.39
Elaine Ling
Casa Emprese aqua Torrado, Trinidad
2002
2009_0093_0007_PT.jpg
2009.93.7
Jonathan Brand
Alice Neel
1966
2010_0028_0001_PT.jpg
2010.28.1
Helen Levitt
New York
1959 (negative); printed later
2010_0050_0002_PT.jpg
2010.50.2
John Bauguess
Near Reedsport, Oregon
1972
2011_0118_0005_PT.jpg
2011.118.5
Matt Eich
Duct Tape
2006
2011_0125_0001_PT.jpg
2011.125.1
Ray K. Metzker
Philadelphia, from the series Autowackies
2009
2011_0098_0005_PT.jpg
2011.98.5
Bing Wright
Rain Window VII
1998
2011_0099_0001A_PT.jpg
2011.99.1A-C
David Hilliard
Andreu (Man at Mirror)
1997
2012_0010_0030_PT.jpg
2012.10.30
Arthur Taussig
Optical Collage: Eadweard Muybridge I
1981
2012_0010_0036_PT.jpg
2012.10.36
Arthur Taussig
Optical Collage: Kertész
1981
2012_0053_0001_PT.jpg
2012.53.1
Bobby Abrahamson
Jacob and Robert; Mitchell, Oregon
March, 2011
0053_0010_0003_PT.jpg
53.10.3
Eugène Atget
Boulevard de Strasbourg, Corsets
1912 (negative); printed later
0061_0005_0002_PT.jpg
61.5.2
Alfred A. Monner
Reeds
1940
0081_0112_0001_PT.jpg
81.112.1
Lee Friedlander
Newark, New Jersey
1962
0081_0113_0005_PT.jpg
81.113.5
Larry Clark
Untitled, from the portfolio Tulsa
printed 1980
0081_0113_0006_PT.jpg
81.113.6
Larry Clark
Untitled, from the portfolio Tulsa
printed 1980
0081_0015_0002_PT.jpg
81.15.2
Lee Friedlander
Putney, Vermont
1972
0081_0041_0002_02_PT.jpg
81.41.2
Lawrence Shlim
Volcanic Ash, Centralia, Washington, 1980
1980
0082_0001_0000_PT.jpg
82.1
Robert DiFranco
Boat Train
1978
0082_0057_0002_PT.jpg
82.57.2
Max Yavno
Two Chinese Men
1947
0085_0082_0001_PT.jpg
85.82.1
Oliver Gagliani
Untitled (White Door, Eureka, Nevada)
1973
0085_0009_0000_PT.jpg
85.9
William Klein
New York
1954
0087_0023_0002_PT.jpg
87.23.2
Roy DeCarava
Hallway, New York
1953 (negative); 1982 (print)
0087_0086_0036_PT.jpg
87.86.36
Clarence Hudson White
Drops of Rain, from the journal Camera Work XXIII
1908
0089_0002_0102_PT.jpg
89.2.102
J. Pascal Sébah
Edfou: le Sanctuaire (Shrine in the Temple of Horus at Edfu, Egypt)
ca. 1875
0091_0077_0013_PT.jpg
91.77.13
Alfred A. Monner
Bus Rider
ca. 1955
0092_0020_0037_PT.jpg
92.20.37
Alfred A. Monner
Untitled
1954
0093_0015_0001_01_PT.jpg
93.15.1
Mark Barnes
Untitled
1985
0094_0036_0013_PT.jpg
94.36.13
Alfred A. Monner
Window Washer
ca. 1955
0094_0058_0027_PT.jpg
94.58.27
Alfred A. Monner
Skid Road Pattern
1950
0094_0058_0036_PT.jpg
94.58.36
Alfred A. Monner
Callers at Springtime
ca. 1955
L0042_0002_0001_PT.jpg
L42.2.1
Minor White
Water Street, Portland
1939
L0042_0003_0024_PT.jpg
L42.3.24
Minor White
China Town
ca. 1939
ST1995_0003_0000_PT.jpg
ST1995.3
László Moholy-Nagy
Spiegel und Spiegelungen (Mirror and Reflection) and Atelier in der Silberkugel (Studio in the Silver Orb), from the publication Malerei, Photographie, Film
1925
T2008_0141_0089_PT.jpg
T2008.141.89
Arthur Taussig
Optical Collage: Bernd and Hilla Becher
ca. 1982

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