
We hope you can join us for our twelfth annual Private Collections Salon & Sale exhibition, featuring more than 100 works by some of the most influential 20th-century and contemporary photographers. Drawn from important private collections, the exhibition offers an opportunity to acquire important photographs, including sold-out editions and works seldom available on the market, in a private setting that provides an alternative to the auction market.

We are excited to confirm our premiere of Sam Taylor-Johnson's exhibition this upcoming fall, timed to the release of her monograph The Self and the Portrait with Rizzoli debuting in October 2026. The exhibition will follow the trajectory of her career as an internationally acclaimed photographer and filmmaker.

For more than 25 years, Joseph Szabo (American, born 1944) taught high school art and photography, utilizing his camera to create connections with his students. In doing so, he gained access to a teenage world that most adults never see. His poignant images from the late 1960s to 1980s reveal a time of rebellion, self-expression, first love, and emotion that accompanies the teenage years.
Our Paris Photo presentation is in partnership with the release of a new monograph of Szabo’s photography edited by Sofia Coppola and published by MACK books. The artist’s work is held in numerous important public and private collections, including MoMA, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Brooklyn Museum; this will be Szabo’s first solo exhibit at Paris Photo.

We are pleased to announce our participation in Untitled Art, Houston – our first time presenting in Texas – and excited to engage with new audiences across the city, state, and region. On view will pair a selection of photographs from Gordon Parks’ groundbreaking series ‘Segregation Story’ alongside Dawoud Bey’s ‘Street Portraits’ to bring attention to their themes of social justice, race relations, civil rights, and the African American experience. Our presentation is timed to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the landmark publication of Parks’ images of the segregated South in Life magazine.

We are delighted to return for the third year of the Atlanta Art Fair with a presentation that reflects our deep roots in Atlanta's art community and longstanding commitment to photographic excellence. Central to the presentation is new work by Chris Millsapp, a multimedia artist whose practice spans fine art, fashion, and narrative photography. We will also present works by Christy Bush, Sheila Pree Bright, Shanequa Gay, Chris Lowell, Thomas Jackson and Angela West — a group whose practices collectively speak to the richness and range of Atlanta's contemporary photography scene.