Elizabeth Heyert to Debut “The Unborn” at the 2026 Venice Biennale

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Personal Structures 2026 

Elizabeth Heyert 

THE UNBORN 

Palazzo Mora during the Venice Biennale 

May 9-November 22, 2026 

The Unborn #9, 2025, platinum palladium print, on Japanese gampi, 61 x 50 cm, 24 x 20 in

NEW YORK—Photographer Elizabeth Heyert will premier nine works from her  new series, The Unborn, during the Venice Biennale in May 2026. Selected as part  of Personal Structures, a group exhibition curated by the European Cultural Centre  (ECC), Heyert’s work will be shown at the historic Palazzo Mora. 

The Unborn speaks to the mystery of what makes us human. Heyert’s portraits are about  what we are all like before we enter the world. They show us the unseen. 

The nine photographs in the series are portraits of pre-natal subjects who were  conceived in the first half of the 20th century and died of natural causes. In this original  and controversial work of art, we are invited to witness a universal experience—a  state that each of us has passed through and of which we have no image or memory. 

Heyert views these portraits as bookends to her ongoing exploration of the experience  of being human, which began with her renown 2006 series of post-mortem  photographs, The Travelers. 

Heyert has a nuanced view of what makes a true portrait. Unlike most portrait  photographers, she works from the outside as an observer rather than a director. She  has photographed people sleeping for hours in her studio, watching and recording  them as they were transformed by their subconscious dreams; and people lost in  hypnotic trances as they acted out an internal private fantasy. In her most well-known  series, The Travelers, she shot formal portraits post-mortem, using the traditional  lighting for a portrait of a living subject to uncover the humanity that can be sensed  even after life has ebbed away. 

Left:The Unborn #1, 2025, platinum palladium print, on Japanese gampi, 61 x 50 cm, 24 x 20 in; Right:The Unborn #3, 2025, platinum palladium print, on Japanese gampi, 61 x 50 cm, 24 x 20 in

Nothing much is known about the figures in The Unborn. Unlike her post-mortem  photographs, which were created after the entire story of a human life had been told,  with The Unborn we can only guess what these subject’s lives might have been. Heyert’s  intention was not to make documents of a physical state but to make portraits that  provoke thought and trigger ideas about how we all began. 

“Everyone will experience The Unborn portraits through the lens of their own  emotions” said Heyert. “There is no right or wrong way to respond. Although we  can never really know anything about the nine figures in my series, we can each  write their stories, if only in our imagination.” 

Heyert often uses analog techniques from the 19th and 20th centuries to transform  these intimate portraits into an expressive vision. The Unborn photos are platinum  palladium prints made on Japanese gampi, echoing the fragility and impermanence  of her subjects. 

About Elizabeth Heyert 

Elizabeth Heyert is an American photographer known for experimental portrait  projects. Formerly a world-renowned architectural photographer, she established her  reputation in the art world with her ground breaking seriesThe Sleepers,The Travelers,The  Narcissists, and The Bound. Her photographs are in the permanent collections of the  Metropolitan Museum of Art, the J. Paul Getty Museum, the San Francisco Museum  of Modern Art, the Beinecke Library of Rare Books and Manuscripts at Yale  University, and numerous private collections. Her books include The Travelers, from  her iconic series of post-mortem photographs, The Sleepers, The Narcissists, The  Outsider, Metropolitan Places, an anthology of 20th century architecture and design,  and The Glasshouse Years, a history of 19th century portrait photography. For more  information, go here: https://www.elizabethheyert.com 

About Personal Structures 

From 9 May to 22 November 2026, Personal Structures—Confluences returns to  Venice for its eighth edition, organized by the European Cultural Centre Italy. Taking  place across the historic venues of Palazzo Bembo, Palazzo Mora, and the Marinaressa  Gardens, the international contemporary art exhibition brings together over 150  artists from more than 30 countries. With free admission, open daily from 10.00 am  to 6.00 pm (closed on Tuesdays).  

Exhibition Details 

Preview: 7 and 8 May, 2026 from 2–6pm 

Dates: 9 May-22 November 2026 

Location: Palazzo Mora, Cannaregio 3659 30121 Venezia 

Organizers: European Cultural Centre (ECC) 

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