AZPA Annual Holiday Print Share
ASU Northlight Gallery 605 E Grant St, Phoenix, AZ, United StatesJoin us for our annual Holiday Print Share!
We are back in person at Northlight Gallery with the annual Arizona Photography Alliance Holiday Print Share! This eagerly anticipated social event features artwork our AZPA members have collected. Each piece will be on display at the event as well as featured in a short presentation given by each collecting member.
Marion Palfi in the Archive: A Social Justice Photographer Across Three Collections (Live Virtual Panel)
Center for Creative Photography 1030 North Olive Road, Tucson, AZ, United StatesJoin us for a lunchtime virtual panel about photographer and social justice advocate Marion Palfi (1907-1978) and the role of the archive. Audrey Sands, Norton Family Assistant Curator of Photography, is joined by curators and archivists from the three national repositories with major holdings of Marion Palfi’s work—The Center for Creative Photography, the Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas, and the Amistad Research Center at Tulane University.
AZPA December 2021 Board Meeting
Rick Gayle Studio 2222 E McDowell Rd, Phoenix, AZ, United StatesSpotlight on Phoenix Film Revival
Phoenix Film Revival 1023 Grand Avenue, Studio E, Phoenix, AZ, United StatesPhoenix Film Revival (PFR) is a community darkroom rooted in preserving the art of film and alternative process photography. Started by a group of photographers in 2016, PFR is a […]
DEADLINE EXTENDED: Portfolio Exchange 2022 Call for Submissions
AZ, United StatesThe Call for Submissions for our first-ever AZPA Portfolio Exchange has been so successful we've decided to give you another week to submit! The goal of the project is to […]
Farewell Photography: The Hitachi Collection of Postwar Japanese Photographs, 1961-1989
Phoenix Art Museum 1625 N. Central Avenue, Phoenix, AZ, United StatesIn the decades following World War II, numerous radical Japanese photographers undertook an aggressive reassessment of the medium. These new non-conformist photographers broke from photojournalism’s norms of objective description and instead adopted a radically expressive, subjective, and critical approach in response to a changing modern world.