At Michael Hoppen Gallery, we are enlivened by the prospect of a plethora of great exhibitions opening this year around the world, that will focus on great photography from Japan. We continue to support Japanese photography and still believe it to be some of the best photography in the world. We have championed Japanese photography for the past 24 years, and their unquestionable talents will be fully exposed for all to see in a major museum exhibition in New York this autumn, and at the Bibliothèque National in Paris, this September. Furthermore, the inimitable Ishiuchi Miyako’s long awaited retrospective at MEP, also in Paris, will coincide with the 29th edition of Paris Photo. There is lots this year to look forward to.
We are also very excited to announce the launch Sohei Nishino’s new Diorama of Venice which will be shown for the first time at TEFAF Maastricht in March. Our project, Cities, like dreams is a collaboration with Daniel Crouch who will juxtapose his rare early vintage maps alongside Sohei’s contemporary dioramas. We do hope you will be able to visit us in The Netherlands. TEFAF is one of the preeminent fairs in the world.
We are also very proud to announce that the extraordinary and previously unknown Lee Miller and Cecil Beaton album we showed last year, is now part of the Bodleian Library’s permanent collection. The Library will use their exceptional conservation department to preserve this historically important album and make it available to students and academics alike to study. We could not have hoped for a better home for Lee Millers work.
Photography is clearly still one of the most important mediums of the modern age. Despite the concerns that Ai will seep into all corners of our medium and remove the traditional craft of making a photograph – I am absolutely sure that raw talent and new technology can find common collaborative ground, and produce new wonderful and interesting work. We are in early days. I remember early photoshop initially looking very unappealing until it was mastered by talented and responsible artists who found new and creative ways to use it to great effect.
I am convinced there will be a similar resolution with Ai. However, it is also interesting to note the huge resurgence of interest in analogue photography by dedicated and new young practitioners. I pray that the makers of analogue equipment and the companies who produce the materials needed to create analogue photographs, will support their efforts.
Michael Hoppen
London, January 2026.
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Eamonn Doyle
Niall Sweeney
David Donohoe
AS IF
International Centre for the Image. Dublin.
6 February–5 April 2026
A collaboration between photographer Eamonn Doyle, artist-designer Niall Sweeney and composer David Donohoe, AS IF is a new and extensive interdisciplinary body of work comprised of silver gelatin prints, film-works, montages, sound, music, painting, drawing and text.
Shot and recorded in Ireland and Japan — in city locations, on constructed studio sets, and in the photographic darkroom — the work assembles thousands of images with composed and recorded sound that build into a visceral and psychological articulation of the physical world and the psyche.
Find out more
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CAN WE STOP KILLING
EACH OTHER?
Sainsbury Centre, Norwich
20 September - 17 May 2026
A series of exhibitions explores the fundamental questions of why humans are led to kill and the culture that wrestles with this notion such as in art, film, TV and theatre.
Reflecting on the real material culture linked to particular case studies from the past and present, such as the Holocaust and the Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda of 1994, the season will be a challenging but eye-opening consideration of some of the most horrifying events in human history.
Seminal works by Ishiuchi Miyako have been included in this exhibition.
More information here
CAN WE STOP KILLING
EACH OTHER?
Sainsbury Centre, Norwich
20 September - 17 May 2026
A series of exhibitions explores the fundamental questions of why humans are led to kill and the culture that wrestles with this notion such as in art, film, TV and theatre.
Reflecting on the real material culture linked to particular case studies from the past and present, such as the Holocaust and the Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda of 1994, the season will be a challenging but eye-opening consideration of some of the most horrifying events in human history.
Seminal works by Ishiuchi Miyako have been included in this exhibition.
More information here
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January 10, 2026
