- “Dig Us,” a virtual exhibition, explores the iconic image of Louis Armstrong and the Great Sphinx of Giza and details of the trip itself.
- Critical Exposure will be reviving their Freedom Fridays starting February 26. DC young people aged 13-24 can drop in monthly on Friday afternoons into CE virtual space for roundtable discussions and to engage with an organizer, activist, and/or photographer working to create positive change in their community.
- From raucous drag nights to hip-hop battles in boxing gyms, Joseph M Giordano’s photographs from the last 25 years capture Baltimore’s vibrant nightlife in a book that the artist thinks “is a document of a time that I think is gone forever.”
- “Working Together” is an unprecedented exhibition that chronicles the formative years of the Kamoinge Workshop, a collective of Black photographers established in New York City in 1963.
- Photographers Roy Sewall and Joel Hoffman lead an online workshop on how to conduct a street photography survey tomorrow at 2 p.m., $20-30.
- Tune into the DC History Center’s Instagram account on Thursday, February 25 at 7 p.m. for a live chat with the DC Street Photography Collective.
- Today at 1 p.m., curators, collections managers, and other experts from Dumbarton House, Georgetown University, and Tudor Place Historic House & Garden will explore Georgetown’s Black history and share tips and techniques for preserving your own family photographs, documents, and more.
- The Museum of Modern Art received a donation of 100 photographs that it hopes will aid in canonizing under-recognized female artists.
- Pro surfer Daniel Fuller has released a collection of his seascape photography in a new Rizzoli book “Liquid Horizon: Meditations on the Surf and Sea.”