Constellation / Redux
- Experience in VR
- Upcoming
In 2023, LUMA presented Diane Arbus: Constellation, an exhibition bringing together for the very first time the complete set of 454 photographs printed from Diane Arbus’s negatives by Neil Selkirk, the only printer authorized by the Estate of the artist since her death.
Conceived as a constellation of images without chronology or hierarchy, the exhibition invited visitors to create their own associations and narratives through the work. This unprecedented presentation later traveled to the Park Avenue Armory in New York and to Gropius Bau in Berlin in 2025.
Today, it is proposed to reactivate this exhibition in a virtual form in order to preserve its memory, scenography, and research materials as a form of living archive. More than a simple digital reconstruction, this virtual experience aims to extend the immersive and non-linear approach of the original exhibition, allowing new audiences to revisit and explore Diane Arbus’s work through alternative modes of transmission and experience.
Practical Informations
All artworks © The Estate of Diane Arbus Collection Maja Hoffmann / LUMA Foundation
Photo: © Adrian Deweerdt
All artworks © The Estate of Diane Arbus Collection Maja Hoffmann / LUMA Foundation
Photo: © Adrian Deweerdt
Diane Arbus
Diane Arbus is one of the most original and influential photographers of the twentieth century. She studied photography with Berenice Abbott, Alexey Brodovitch, and Lisette Model and had her first published photographs appear in Esquire in 1960. In 1963 and 1966 she was awarded John Simon Guggenheim Fellowships and was one of three photographers whose work was the focus of New Documents, John Szarkowski’s landmark exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art in 1967. Arbus’s depictions of couples, children, female impersonators, nudists, New York City pedestrians, suburban families, circus performers, and celebrities, among others, span the breadth of the postwar American social sphere and constitute a diverse and singularly compelling portrait of humanity. A year after her death, her work was selected for inclusion in the Venice Biennale, the first time any photographer had been so honored.
In the ensuing fifty years, major traveling museum retrospectives have been mounted by the Museum of Modern Art in New York (1972), the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2003), the Jeu de Paume, Paris (2011) The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2016), and the Art Gallery of Ontario (2020).
Books devoted to her work include: Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph (1972), Magazine Work(1984), Untitled (1995), Revelations (2003), The Libraries (2004), A Chronology (2011), Silent Dialogues(2015), In the Beginning (2016), A Box of Ten Photographs (2018), and Documents (2022).
In addition to the museums mentioned above, significant collections of her work can be found in numerous institutions throughout the world. The Bibliothèque Nationale de France was an early collector, and the Centre Pompidou followed.