“The Polaroid Project” on show at the MKG museum in Hamburg

A touring exhibition showcases the phenomenon of instant photography in all its variety.

“The Polaroid Project”, on view at the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg until June 17, 2018, sheds light on the advancement of creative expressions made possible by the groundbreaking technology of instant photography and showcases around 220 works by over 100 artists, as well as 90 camera models and prototypes from the MIT Museum in Cambridge, Massachussets.

Auke Bergsma, Woman Walking, 1981, Polaroid SX-70 Time Zero, © Auke Bergsma, Courtesy OstLicht Collection Vienna
André Kertész, August 13, 1979, 1979, Polaroid SX-70, 10,7 x 8,8 cm, © The Estate of André Kertész, courtesy Stephen Bulger Gallery
Oliviero Toscani, Andy Warhol with Camera, 1974, Polaroid Type 105, 8,3 x 10,8 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2018
Andy Warhol, Andy Sneezing, 1978, Polaroid SX-70, © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Courtesy OstLicht Collection Vienna
Dennis Hopper, Los Angeles, Back Alley, 1987, Polaroid SX-70, 10,7 x 8,8 cm, © Dennis Hopper, Courtesy of The Hopper Art Trust
Shelby Lee Adams, Esther and Bee Jay, 1991, Polaroid Polapan 4x5 Type 52, 12,7 x 10,2 cm, © Shelby Lee Adams
“The Polaroid Project”, exhibition view, MKG, 2018. Photo Michaela Hille
“The Polaroid Project”, exhibition view, MKG, 2018. Photo Michaela Hille
“The Polaroid Project”, exhibition view, MKG, 2018. Photo Michaela Hille
“The Polaroid Project”, exhibition view, MKG, 2018. Photo Michaela Hille
“The Polaroid Project”, exhibition view, MKG, 2018. Photo Michaela Hille
Bruce Charlesworth, Untitled, 1979, Hand-painted Polaroid SX-70, 10,7 x 8,8 cm, © Bruce Charlesworth 1979
Sandi Fellman, Grey Lion, Tokyo, Japan, 1983, Polaroid 20x24 Polacolor, 73,7 x 56 cm, © Sandi Fellman
Luigi Ghirri, World No. 1, 1980, Polaroid 20x24 Polacolor, © Eredi di Luigi Ghirri, Courtesy OstLicht Collection, Vienna
James Nitsch, Razor Blade, 1976, Polaroid SX-70 assemblage with razor blade, 10,7 x 8,8 cm, © James Nitsch
Nobuyoshi Araki, Lady Gaga, 2009, Polaroid SX-70, © Nobuyoshi Araki, Courtesy OstLicht Collection, Vienna
Toshio Shibata, Untitled (
Charles (1907–1978) and Ray Eames (1912–1988), SX-70, 1972, Filmstill, © Eames Office LLC (eamesoffice.com)
Charles (1907–1978) and Ray Eames (1912–1988), SX-70, 1972, Filmstill, © Eames Office LLC (eamesoffice.com)
Charles (1907–1978) and Ray Eames (1912–1988), SX-70, 1972, Filmstill, © Eames Office LLC (eamesoffice.com)
Charles (1907–1978) and Ray Eames (1912–1988), SX-70, 1972, Filmstill, © Eames Office LLC (eamesoffice.com)

Polaroid stands for a technology, an industry, a brand that has attained legendary status, and its products. Presented to the public for the first time in 1947 by American scientist and Polaroid founder Edwin Land in New York, the first instant camera called Polaroid 95 helped photography move beyond the traditional black & white darkroom-made image. As if by magic, the picture gradually appears before the eyes of the photographer: thanks to its immediacy and spontaneity, the new medium offers plentiful of chances for experimentation, thus becoming an exciting playground for endless discoveries. It’s the beginning of a visual revolution that is still pervasive today, living on in photo apps and Instagram.

Charles (1907–1978) and Ray Eames (1912–1988), SX-70, 1972, Filmstill, © Eames Office LLC

“The Polaroid Project” combines the spectacular American collection from the corporate headquarters in Cambridge (MA), with its European counterpart, originally housed at the branch office in Amsterdam, and additional photographs loaned by artists or their executors. Excerpts of everyday life, fleeting impressions and moods, or expressive self-portraits: dating from 1955 to 2015, the works on view in the exhibition range from the popular SX-70 snapshot in its unmistakable white frame, to Polacolor and black-and-white film in medium format, all the way to the large 20 x 24” Polaroids (50 x 61 cm).

After being shown in Hamburg, the exhibition will travel to Berlin, where it will be hosted at C/O Berlin from July 7 until September 23, 2018.

  • The Polaroid Project
  • MKG Hamburg
  • until 17 June 2018
  • Steintorpl., Hamburg