Picture Takers features artwork made from or inspired by vernacular photography. Loosely defined as photography of the everyday not originally intended as art, vernacular photography includes snapshots, news and advertising images, family pictures, ID photos, mug shots, and historical archives. While vernacular photographs have value as cultural artifacts and collectible objects in their own right, the artists in Picture Takers re-use them in transformative ways. By “taking” pictures originally made by others and creating new contexts for them, the artists in this exhibition invite us to speculate and fantasize about the images, and perhaps invent new narratives for them. Drawn from a wide range of sources, they reveal much about the kinds of pictures we take, share and discard. The works in Picture Takers help us explore our personal and collective history, identity, memory and longing, while examining our evolving relationship to the photographic image.