The hallways of Xposure 2026‘s recently unveiled Documentary Zone at Aljada this year were filled with a certain kind of silence that descends upon a room full of long-form documentary photography. Not the quiet of a museum. Something more substantial. Compared to the other halls, visitors moved more slowly, lingering in front of frames as people do at gravesites or old family albums, as if they were trying to read something beneath the picture instead of just staring at it.
This year’s zone consisted of thirteen exhibitions, each the result of years rather than weeks, and this distinction was more important than the festival’s marketing copy suggested. Anybody can take a powerful picture in the afternoon. The lineup unapologetically embraced the fact that what takes ten years is something quite different. There was Michael Yamashita, the veteran of National Geographic, whose name alone attracts large crowds. This also applied to Philippe Chancel, whose research on political turmoil has a clinical, almost forensic feel. In contrast, Tomasz Tomaszewski’s photographs seemed cozier and more personal, as if he had spent so much time in trying situations that the camera had just ceased to be an obstacle.

For this observer, at least, the theme of climate and environment was the most impactful. Reading a statistics report about water scarcity is not the same as witnessing a lake vanish in pictures taken years apart. The displays on inland lake shrinkage and coastal erosion weren’t shouting about disaster. They were simply displaying it, frame by frame, and for some reason, that restraint made the message more impactful. It’s possible that the festival organizers had an innate understanding of this: grief captured in a quiet photo spreads more than grief captured in a loud one.
“Ocean Rage: West Africa Is Being Swallowed by The Sea,” Matilde Gattoni’s upcoming talk, promises to delve into precisely that tension between slow disaster and sudden headline. Although the cumulative harm to livelihoods, food security, and entire cultural rhythms is arguably worse, coastal erosion does not trend on social media as a single storm does. Photographers on this beat seem to have developed their own archive because they are sick of waiting for the news cycle to catch up.
Due in part to its refusal to be glamorous, the section on conflict and displacement carried a unique weight. The claim that war photography can degenerate into spectacle or trauma-as-content is a reputational issue. Anush Babajanyan’s long-term work in post-conflict and socially transformed areas appeared to purposefully defy that inclination, emphasizing the unremarkable aftermath over the dramatic moment. Her upcoming talk on the Aral Sea, “After the Aral Sea,” is situated at a peculiar nexus of human and environmental catastrophe because the sea’s retreat was more of an engineering decision made during the Soviet era that went horribly, irreversibly wrong than a natural disaster.
Observing all of this over the course of a few days, it was noteworthy how the zone resisted being just depressed. There were times when standing in front of Ali Haj Suleiman’s exhibition on Syrian families looking for the missing felt unbearably heavy, and it could have easily descended into despair. However, there was also a stubbornness that pervaded the work, a refusal to allow absence to be the last word. It’s difficult to ignore how frequently that theme recurred throughout the thirteen exhibitions: people’s insistence on carrying on, documenting, and remembering—even when doing so comes at a cost.
Strangely, the science and visual research strand provided some relief. In his talk on ice core photography, “Stories Trapped in Ice,” Lukasz Larsson Warzecha reframes climate change as frozen evidence rather than an abstract threat. That strategy has a coolness to it, both literally and figuratively, that counteracts the more intense emotional register in other parts of the zone.
It’s unclear if this translates into anything outside of the festival. Exhibitions move people in a room, but policy moves much more slowly and seldom because of photos. Even so, it’s hard to completely ignore the format when you see strangers standing still in front of a shrinking lake or a missing father’s portrait. Here, Xposure has created something that seems more like a duty than a source of amusement: to look and then not turn away.
