5 international photographers to keep on your radar

On view at MoMA, and hailing from the US to Nepal, they ‘use photography to connect within their communities and across nation-states’

By Janelle Zara

Launched in 1985, the ‘New Photography’ series of exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York has showcased the groundbreaking work of more than 150 artists. For its 40th anniversary edition, the organizers were guided by ‘the radical potential of image-making as a mode of resistance and free imagination,’ says Roxana Marcoci, Acting Chief Curator of Photography at MoMA.

‘New Photography 2025: Lines of Belonging’ features 13 international artists and collectives from New Orleans, Mexico City, Kathmandu, and Johannesburg – four cities, according to the exhibition text, whose cultural history predates the official formation of their respective countries. The throughline that emerged was a spirit of collective solidarity, where photography served as a vehicle for bringing embattled communities together. Across these overlapping themes and commonalities, the artists present a striking range of technical and material approaches to photography. ‘It’s a kind of deeper understanding of how people use photography to connect within their communities and across nation-states,’ says Marcoci.

Sandra Blow
Sandra Blow, Tony, 2018. © Sandra Blow; L. Kasimu Harris, Come Tuesday (Marwan Pleasant at Sportsman’s Corner), New Orleans, 2020. © L. Kasimu Harris; Sabelo Mlangeni, Mbulelo and Friends, Thembisa Township, 2004. © Sabelo Mlangeni. Courtesy of the artists, Saraswati Rai Collection, Nepal Picture Library and GEFONT Collection.
Gabrielle Garcia Steib
Gabrielle Garcia Steib, Still from The Past is a Foreign Country, 2020. Super 8 and archival footage. 3 min. 19 sec. © Gabrielle Garcia Steib. Courtesy of the artist.
Prasiit Sthapit
Prasiit Sthapit, Saloni and friends from Change of Course, 2013. © Prasiit Sthapit. Courtesy of the artist.

Rather than organize the exhibition along geographic lines, the curators installed a series of cross-cultural dialogues, where individual practices converged and diverged along themes of identity and kinship; biological and chosen families; the importance of ritual; the preservation of knowledge; and notions of care. Personal memories merge with collective ones, as artists use photography to connect their lived experiences with larger historical events.

Since its inaugural 1985 exhibition, the ‘New Photography’ series has embraced a relatively quick pace of curation, allowing each show to respond to urgent real-world events in real time. An obvious subject for this latest exhibition might have been the role of digital technologies in our image-saturated world. ‘We are all connected, obviously, through our iPhones and social platforms,’ says Marcoci, ‘but we decided not to focus on this kind of instant connectivity.’ (In fact, the 30th anniversary show, ‘Ocean of Images’already covered ‘connectivity, the circulation of images, information networks, and communication models.’)

For ‘Lines of Belonging’, the curators turned away from the increasingly isolating digital world and focused on modes of connection predating the Internet, looking to communities that formed face-to-face in physical, sometimes private, spaces, and endured despite long histories of injustice.

Tania Franco Klein
Tania Franco Klein, Mirrored Table, Person (Subject #14) from Subject Studies: Chapter 1. 2022. © Tania Franco Klein. Courtesy of the artist.
Sheelasha Rajbhandari
Sheelasha Rajbhandari, Agony of the New Bed (detail), 2023. © Sheelasha Rajbhandari.
Lindokuhle Sobekwa, Photography
Lindokuhle Sobekwa,Tell it to the Mountains, 2020. Installation view at A4 Art Foundation, South Africa, December 2020. © Lindokuhle Sobekwa. Courtesy of the artist.

Lake Verea

The exhibition opens with life-sized images of Mexico City’s Palacio de Bellas Artes, shot by Lake Verea – the Queer conceptual artist duo Carla Verea Hernández and Francisca Rivero-Lake. Their architectural photography examines themes of cultural and political heritage as it appears in the built environment, zooming in on the surface details. Taken from their 2019 ‘Uno a Uno’ series, images of Art Deco flourishes, for example, present an amalgamation of both pre-Columbian and colonial European histories, both of which continue to shape Mexican national identity, art, and politics today.

Lake Verea Photography
Lake Verea (Carla Verea Hernández and Francisca Rivero-Lake), Hojas de Metal (Metal Leaves), 2019. © Lake Verea. Courtesy of the artists.

Lebohang Kganye

Lebohang Kganye is a Johannesburg artist similarly interested in exploring her national history through photographs. Rather than shoot images, she mines personal and public archives, merging historical black-and-white photographs with whimsical elements of theater and children’s storybooks. Marcoci describes the artist’s kinetic installations as ‘photographic stage sets’ in which cutout figures representing pre- and post-apartheid South Africa cast layered shadows on the wall. ‘Her storytelling points to the fabricated nature of history, and of photography for that matter.’

Lebohang Kganye
Lebohang Kganye, Untouched by the ancient caress of time, 2022. Installation view of Staging Memories, the Grand Prix Images Vevey 2021/2022 winning project, produced by Images Vevey (Switzerland) and premiered at the Biennale Images Vevey 2022. Photograph by Emilien Itim.

Sandra Blow

For both Sandra Blow and L. Kasimu Harris, nightlife functions as an essential refuge for the disempowered. Blow’s stylized portraits of Queer youth in Mexico City focus on fashion as an expression of creativity and self-possession.

Sandra Blow and Allan Balthaza
Sandra Blow and Allan Balthazar, from Untitled, 2017. © Sandra Blow.

L. Kasimu Harris

In New Orleans, Harris captures the subjects of his ‘Vanishing Black Bars & Lounges’ more candidly, documenting the distinct textures and aesthetics of the city’s Black-owned establishments as gentrification poses the constant threat of extinction.

L. Kasimu Harris
L. Kasimu Harris, “King” Joe Lindsey and his Royal Setup (Roberton’s Vieux Carre Lounge), New Orleans from Vanishing Black Bars and Lounges, 2022. © L. Kasimu Harris. Courtesy of the artist.

Sabelo Mlangeni

Marcoci points to Johannesburg-based Sabelo Mlangeni as one of a number of artists on view who ‘embrace and explore the idea of love as a political unifier.’ Mlangeni’s black-and-white images of Queer marriage and friendships in South Africa capture the solidarity of their respective communities in states of celebration, self-expression, and joy.

Sabelo Mlangeni,
Sabelo Mlangeni, Faith and Sakhi Moruping, Thembisa Township from Isivumelwano, 2004. © Sabelo Mlangeni.

Credits and captions

Janelle Zara is a freelance writer specializing in art and architecture. She is the author of Masters at Work: Becoming an Architect (2019). She currently lives in Los Angeles.

Caption for header image: Saraswati Rai Collection and Nepal Picture Library, A mass meeting of former kamlaris (women bonded labourers) in Kanchanpur, Nepal (2010) from The Public Life of Women: A Feminist Memory Project, 2023. Courtesy of GEFONT Collection and Nepal Picture Library. 

The exhibition will be on view at MoMA from September 14, 2025, through January 17, 2026.

Published on September 8, 2025.

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