Right up to the 1970s, many photographers saw black and white as the standard, and had no interest in colour photography. Fifty years later, that picture has changed dramatically.

New Horizons presents a crucial turning point in the history of photography. Colour has suffused every area of photography today – it’s hard now to imagine it being any other way.

This summer the Rijksmuseum showcases highlights of modern colour photography, with work by Viviane Sassen, Michael Wolf, Pieter Hugo, Ruud van Empel and others.

ART–DOCUMENTARY CROSSOVER

The rise of colour photography led to a blurring of genre boundaries, with artistic practices converging with documentary practices. Photography remains a key medium for showing how people live – in sometimes subtle and indirect ways.

Henk Wildschut, for example, documents the lives of refugees in Calais without showing the people themselves: we see only the tents and other structures in which they live. And rather than shooting interiors for his reflections on living conditions in Hong Kong, Michael Wolf captures the vast and alienating anonymity of skyscraper exteriors. These photographers use the visible world to convey meaning, as do Jacquie Wessels, with her still lives in car repair garages; Anne Geene, with her ordering of nature; and Ruud van Empel, with the utterly new worlds he creates from thin air.

Photography
30 June - 3 Sep 2023

OPENING HOURS

Daily 9 tot 17h.

ADDRESS

Museumstraat 1
1071 XX Amsterdam

ACCESSIBILITY

Wheelchair access
Guide dogs allowed
Lifts on every floor

FAQ

Free cloak room
Photography allowed
Free WiFi