Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

By David Pauley
I. Observing

On a trip to the world’s busiest museum last fall, my husband and I were rudely jostled by a determined fellow museum-goer, a middle-aged Parisienne who shuffled from canvas to canvas at an unvarying two-meter distance, capturing paintings in rhythmic succession with her smartphone. Uncharitable judgments crowded into my thoughts about this person: about her sharp elbows and scissoring lurch; about her greedy, even unseemly quest to reduce the Louvre collection of Renaissance paintings to a private trove, whether for personal reflection or for reposting on social media, I’ll never know.

Guggenheim Museum NYC, 2025. Rolleiflex 2.8F, Kodak Tri-X 400 (Sonia Delaunay)

That I was at that moment using a pre-war Leica to make “discreet,” “artistic” photos in the same gallery, or that I’m just now sharing similar images, albeit ones taken at different museums, here on this online platform, are ironies to which, even then, I was not totally insensitive. Whatever our differences in temperament or taste, the Louvre Snapper and I share a photographic avocation that raises some deeper questions: Why do we take pictures in museums? And when we do so, how do we know if we’ve gotten what we want from them?

Parthenon Museum, Athens, 2025. Rolleiflex 2.8F, Kodak Tri-X 400

Having only fairly recently been deemed museum-worthy in its own right, photography has for a much longer stretch of its history played a supporting role diffusing images of other art forms to points near and far. For all of the blue-chip art printed in catalogues or stenciled onto tote bags, few of us would consider such museum photos, however accomplished, as having much artistic merit. Indeed, the better they are at preserving the likeness of the pieces they depict, the less apt such pictures are to be seen as having any identity apart from them.

MoMA, NYC, 2026. Rolleiflex 2.8F, CineStill 400D (Mark Rothko)

To qualify as authorial—an image created by a human being with some intention beyond reproduction—museum photographs need either to be altered in some interesting way or to make a commentary on the works and the environment that envelops them. The best such images, as in this frame by Vivian Maier, in my view succeed by quietly noting incongruities or parallels between the artworks and the humans who encounter them.

Here are some examples of my recent efforts:

Städel Museum, Frankfurt, 2025. Leica III, Elmar 50mm f3.5, Ilford HP5 Plus (Philipp Veit)
MoMA, NYC, 2026. Rolleiflex 2.8F, CineStill 400D. (Mark Rothko)
MoMA, NYC, 2026 Leica M3, Ilford HP5 Plus, Thypoch Simera 75mm f1.4 (Henri Matisse)
Guggenheim, NYC, 2026. Hasselblad SWC/M. Kodak Tri-X 400. (Carol Bove)
MoMA, NYC, 2026. CineStill 400D, Rolleiflex 2.8F. (Jackson Pollock)
British Museum, London, 2026. Tele-Rolleiflex 135mm f4 Kodak Tri-X 400 (Parthenon Marbles)
II. Decoding

Although artistic observation and social commentary figure in some of my personal museum photos, they aren’t always driving factors. Another option is revealed in the following image, taken recently on a visit to New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

Mike Kelley, Deodorized Central Mass with Satellites, 1991. Exhibited at MoMA. 2026. Leica M3, DR Summicron 50, CineStill 800T

In the moment of composing this photo, I was more concerned with technical matters—how to get an adequate exposure; how to keep the frame free of people in the museum’s crowded gallery on a Sunday afternoon—than with the strange works suspended in my viewfinder. While those works most definitely made an impression, a vague disquiet that caused me to reach for my camera, those sensations only resolved into coherent thoughts later, after I developed and studied the scans of my photos at home.

More than any other factor, my unease with Mike Kelley’s multi-hued sculptures comes from the material they are composed from: stuffed animals, thousands of them, rescued from landfills, their weirdness increased by the artist’s choice to tuck most of their faces and other recognizable markers out of sight into the interior of his forms. Nostalgia and guilt—for my daughter’s “stuffie”-filled childhood, certainly, but also for the degraded planet we have bequeathed her and taught her to accept as normal amidst so much junk—mingled in my thoughts. While these impressions were likely building as I stood with my camera at the museum, the reticence imposed by such public places kept them temporarily at bay. Feeling them later while looking at my photo, I was able to more fully grasp the reproach in Kelley’s blobby forms, and also their unsettling beauty.

III. Responding

If my personal photos have the side effect of helping me sort through the confusion that can accompany a trip to a museum, other times I take them with a more explicit intention. Such is the case with a trio of photos prompted by the recent “Monet and Venice” exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum. Like many folks of my age, I associate Monet with the mid-1980s; his paintings at the Marmottan Museum (now the Monet/Marmottan Museum) in Paris were a defining aesthetic experience for me when I saw them during a year abroad there in 1986, a first true artistic “crush.” (I wasn’t present in the U.S. to see the blockbuster show at Washington’s National Gallery that ignited the modern American Impressionist craze that same year).

Waterlily Mug with Monet Autograph, 2026. iPhone Screenshot from the museum shop website, Boston Museum of Fine Arts

In contrast to the torrent of Monet-themed merch churned out continuously by all and sundry over the past four decades, I made these photos with a classic black and white film, Ilford HP5 Plus, and printed them on fiber-based paper in the darkroom. This limiting choice was deliberate. I had already gone once to see “Monet and Venice,” and been surprised by it; these photos, taken on a return visit the last day of the show’s run, came from a desire to grapple a bit with the exhibition’s unexpected, somewhat melancholy impact.

The Brooklyn show’s climax came in a circular gallery at the back of the exhibition, a room sheathed in deep blue wall-covering on which were mounted a dozen or so views of the Venice lagoon and various buildings alongside it. In their gilt frames and with their classic subject matter, these spotlighted canvases seemed on a first look to have little to do with the shimmering near-abstraction of the waterlily paintings I had found so moving in my twenties. In the calmness of that blue room, however, with the illuminated works set like bright windows in the dark wall, the relationship between them and the paintings that so transfixed me in my youth became clear.

Monet in Brooklyn, One. 2026. Leica M3, Minolta M Rokkor 40mm f2. Ilford HP5. 9-1/4×7-1/4 inch Darkroom Print

It is the light, of course, that unites them.

More than any other artist I can think of, Monet is a virtuoso at representing the tonal shifts of even a slight variation in illumination (a different moment of the day; a shifting layer of cloud) and its vast impact on the scenes before him. This is true whether his subject matter is the oft-repeated images of aquatic flowers, of a cathedral façade or, as in this case, in views of a maritime capital, bathed in the opaline glow of the Adriatic.

Monet in Brooklyn, Two, 2026. Leica M3, Minolta M Rokkor 40mm f2. Ilford HP5. 9-1/4×7-1/4 inch Darkroom Print

Even with the most sophisticated digital equipment, attempting to capture the cumulative impact of these paintings, seen together only rarely since they left Monet’s studio, would be a huge undertaking. Rather than seeking anything so ambitious, my modest set of prints, made with a Leica M3 (I metered for the paintings’ highlights, allowing the gallery and its crowds to drop into shadow) are my effort to suggest something of the works’ emotional resonance. The first frame (above, top) shows a complete painting, almost a reference photo, taken from a close distance. The second (above, middle) shows the same painting from further back in the gallery, with the silhouettes of two patrons close against it. The third, even further back and from a different angle (below), shows a trio of paintings on the gallery walls, their outlines deformed by the bodies of other patrons or sliced by the edge of the frame. Recorded on the 35 x 24 millimeter negative, their details are on the point of dissolving, yet in the enveloping darkness, not unlike a memory, their radiance persists.

Thanks for reading.

Monet in Brooklyn, Three, 2026. Leica M3, Minolta M Rokkor 40mm f2. Ilford HP5.  9-1/4×7-1/4 inch Darkroom Print

Postscript

According to the curators of the Brooklyn Museum exhibit, Monet’s views of Venice were begun during a three month sojourn there with his wife Alice in 1908. Reluctant to depart from his home in Giverny, where he was deep in his studies of waterlilies, he relented under pressure from Alice, who found that late-career preoccupation vexing. Returning from Italy, the artist completed the Venice paintings with renewed vigor. Agreeing with Alice that the Italian interlude had done him good, Monet nonetheless was unable to fulfill a desire to return there for a later visit owing to her death in 1911. In the wake of that loss and with the advent of World War I, he applied himself all the more firmly to the waterlilies, in the process making the unprecedentedly massive panels (close to a hundred meters total) that he donated to the French nation with the return of peace. Received with frigid indifference by the French public in the 1920s, those works became an inspiration for later generations of artists and can be seen today, by appointment, in a specially-designed oval gallery at the Musée de l’Orangerie in Paris, the “Sistine Chapel of Impressionism.”

Claude Monet died at age 86 in 1926.

FEATURED IMAGE: MoMA NYC, 2023. Leica M10-R, Summilux 50 ASPH f1.4 (from my very brief period with a digital Leica)

 

You can see more of my work at leica1933.com.

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About The Author

By David Pauley
I'm a Brooklyn-based photographer and psychoanalyst. My journey with photography began in middle school in the late 1970s and revived in 2019 when I bought a used film camera and installed a darkroom in my basement. I'm committed to analog photography and am enthusiastic about the expressive power of old cameras, traditional processes and methods. You can see more of my work at www.leica1933.com.
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Comments

Jeffery Luhn on Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

David,
Thank you for the interesting perspectives on how and why people make photos in museums. I think it's often a 'been there, done that,' thing. Any serious art fan would buy the images in one form or another in the gift store. I have a Monet dish towel that I'm sure he did not envision. Years ago, I had a job photographing the exhibits in the Oakland Museum on the monday before it was open to the public. 8x10 Ektachromes for printing into collections. I took every step to light each work, get them square to the camera, etc. I was proud of the results, but it didn't match the feeling of being alone with the art.
Jeffery
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

Thanks for your response, Jeffrey! Your experience photographing the art on Ektschrome reminds me of a gentleman I met last summer who did similar work on 8x10 transparencies for various NYC art galleries back in the pre-Internet days. The gallery would ship the transparencies to interested buyers in Tokyo or Ridyah, and the frames captured enough detail for the buyers to decide whether to purchase the art without actually seeing the pieces in the flesh. Listening to him I geeked out about the technical aspects but until reading your post didn't consider what it must've been like to me alone (more or less) with marquis works of art. Unless I win the lottery it's not one I'll ever have, but it's nice imagining what that must have felt like. Cheers!

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Scott Ferguson on Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

Hey David,
Terrific post as always! I have visited a fair few museums and galleries with a camera in hand, part of the hazards of being married to a fine artist but a pleasure in itself, and struggle not to take photos to somehow capture/commemorate the experience. But I also struggle to take photos that have any real meaning and resonance for me as photographs in themselves. Vivian Maier is an untouchable genius at capturing meaningful images out of the every day experiences of people around her without them appearing to be aware of her presence with a camera, somehow knowing to be in the right place and trip the shutter at the right moment. I like where you are going with your museum shots and the 'candid' shots of people in galleries are very well done. But I find the Monet shots that isolate the painted image monochrome floating in negative space at the end very interesting indeed.
Great stuff!
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

Thanks so much for your response, Scott! You're right about Vivian M, who seemed to have the knack for being everywhere all at once in perfect light with impeccable framing and exposure. I will always be a babe in the woods in comparison, but still she's such an inspiration. Thanks also for your kind words about the dark Monet frames—and for making it all the way to the end of a longer-than-usual post. I so appreciate it.

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Scott Ferguson replied:

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

One thought I did have with Vivian M when looking at that image, is that we don't see all of her "outtakes", like we do of our own work. Whoever curates and chooses her frames that are put into books and other types of publications (John Maloof?) is also incredibly talented in their own right to 'see' those amazing frames out of the many thousands of images in her archive. That being said, I'm not sure anything in my "best of/Portfolio" Lightroom folder holds a candle to Vivian Maier. We can all dream...

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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

I think her outtakes are probably far superior to my takes! What's amazing to me is the seeming lack of ego. I mean, she clearly had an ego and could be quite determined and even intrusive about getting the shot, but it doesn't seem she wanted praise for her work from others. Maybe she tried and was dismissed, perhaps she didn't even try. Definitely a peculiar kind of genius.

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Bob Janes on Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

I can think of three paintings I took a photograph of while going around the Smithsonian in Washington a few years ago.
One was a painting of some girls at a window that really looked like they were coming out of the frame - it struck me as an extra seeing the painting hung rather than just reproduced in a book. Another was a portrait which now a startling likeness to the comedian Nish Kumar, while the last was a woman playing a lute which was obviously a copy of the picture my in laws had up in their dining room for years... So in two cases, I was only taking a photograph as a method of showing someone back in the UK something I thought was interesting... If I hadn't been alone, I might just have commented to whoever was with me...
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

Hi Bob, thanks for responding. We're so saturated in images now with the Internet that it's sometimes hard to recall a time when making a physical photo or buying a postcard or catalog was the only reasonable way to keep a record of things seen in museums or elsewhere that struck our fancy. Like many folks I'm sure I also remember people in my parents' generation having dinner parties where the main event after would be setting up the slide projector to share photos of Washington DC, the Grand Canyon or wherever with friends and family. Minus the Jello salad and Sanka, I suppose that's part of what we do here on 35mmc! Thanks again friend.

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Tony Warren on Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

I think there is one major difference with what you have produced David and what your intrusive Louvre lady was doing. You have painted a picture on a picture, portraying the atmosphere and impact the works have provoked. The mono Monet is there to support your theme and the silhouetted lady viewing it is so much more telling. There's humour and irony in there too. The two young women studying the statuesque figure, with the older lady just walking past with the guy in the corner giving more attention to the young women and the three intent phone viewers that contrasts with other, more engaged studies. I guess art has still the power to impact us, but I get the feeling that the emotion isn't quite as strong any more.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

Thank you Tony! I could fill 50 posts with outtakes of people staring at the mobile phones in the midst of museum galleries—and they'd all be equally boring! The lure of these little screens is insidious, alas. Still I'm almost always heartened despite the cell phones by the huge numbers of people who still turn up at museums, not just in NY but in smaller cities too. Makes me feel a bit better about the collective "us." Cheers!

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Art Meripol on Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

Lovely images. I have always enjoyed shooting in a museum, trying to capture patrons reactions and contrasts to the art. I did try years ago to shoot a photo I very much wanted in the Guggenheim but security flipped out when they saw my camera. So it was nice to see you managed a frame or two. I think I have two museums shots I'm proud of among the many I have. One was at The Modern in Fort Worth. A great museum if you ever get there. The other was at Crystal Bridges in Bentonville, Arkansas. Another special museum. I used to go to NY once a year while my wife was there for market and all I did was wander the streets and duck into museums. Great post. Thanks David.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

Thank you Art! I've heard that the Crystal Bridges is fantastic, but hadn't til now heard of the Modern in Fort Worth. If I'm in those parts I will surely make a visit. It's interesting that security at the Guggenheim freaked out at your camera. I remember having that experience in other museums back in the day but with the ubiquity of cell phone cameras now I think they've mostly surrendered. That is unless you're using flash... cheers from Brooklyn.

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Gary Smith on Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

Nothing from the Frick?
I like to visit museums; some I've been to more than once. Some are still on my list.
My wife likes to take photos while we're in museums.
I don't.
I can always go back.

Thanks for your thoughts, David!
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 14/04/2026

Hi Gary, the Frick is glorious, all the more so since the recent renovation when they expanded into the upper floor of the mansion. I've always struggled in the galleries there because of the dim lighting, but will take along a fast lens/film combo the next time I visit and see what happens. Thanks for your comment!

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Niall Keohane on Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

A beautifully written article, thank you. It's a really interesting exposition of the drive - which I admit to having - to record art, to reflect our own interpretations (art reflecting life reflecting art reflecting life? Mega-meta).
Your images are gorgeous. I love the HP5 photos of the Monet exhibition.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

Thank you so much for the kind words, Niall! I'm thrilled you liked the Monet photos, which are my favorites in the post.

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Walter Reumkens on Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

A brilliant post and wonderful photos. Without any input from the other visitors – they were simply there...
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

Hi Walter, thanks so much for your kind response. Yes, the other visitors are part of the furnishings almost. Although I sometimes dream of having a solo trip to the Met or the Louvre with no other patrons (what a bounty!), the people-watching for me is generally one of the joys of the experience. Warm best from Brooklyn.

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Walter Reumkens replied:

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

It’s nice to be on your own without other people around so you can view the artworks in peace. But that’s not necessarily the best for taking photos. People who feel they aren’t being watched come across as more authentic in photos. Whether it’s a museum or a city park. All the best, David.

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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

Thank you Walter!

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Nick Orloff on Taking Photos in Museums: A Meditation

Comment posted: 16/04/2026

David,

I'll take a photo of an artwork at a museum/gallery from time to time, but I'm often tempted to ask the folks that photograph EVERYTHING when they might look at those images again, and if they really like them, why don't they buy the damn book in the gift shop - the images will be better.

But I'm a grumpy (older) man, and my wife tells me I need to keep my mouth shut.

An excellent post, thank you.
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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 16/04/2026

Thank you Nick! I was very grumpy indeed with the Louvre Snapper.... I think cellphone cameras have exponentially increased people's sense that reality can be "captured," time stopped. I know that impulse is also present in taking photos using old-fashioned analogue methods but waiting for the film to be developed and smelling the darkroom chemicals has a way of reminding me that the pictures I make don't capture anything. They're just an important way I stay happy and (relatively) sane. Take care and thanks. -D

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