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Very Modern and Rather Ugly
Benidorm Spain 1997 From Autoportrait series © Collection Martin Parr Magnum Photos

Martin Parr »

Very Modern and Rather Ugly

Exhibition: 3 Apr – 12 Aug 2026

Thu 2 Apr 17:00

Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam

Keizersgracht 609
1017 DS Amsterdam

+31 (0)20-5516500


www.foam.org

Mon-Wed 10-18; Thu-Fri 10-21; Sat-Sun 10-18

Foam pays tribute to the legacy of British photographer Martin Parr with the exhibition Very Modern and Rather Ugly. Bringing together a selection of his most iconic works, the exhibition celebrates Parr’s unmistakable way of seeing, witty societal observations and enduring fascination with the role of photography in everyday life. 



Join us on Thursday 2 April from 17.00 to 21.00 hrs for the opening of the exhibition. This marks Parr’s first solo museum exhibition in the Netherlands in more than twenty years.

Parr is celebrated for his ability to make the familiar look strange and the boring interesting. Through his vibrant visual language, he transformed seemingly banal scenes into incisive reflections on modern society. Central to his life’s work were themes of consumption, cultural identity, tourism and class, which he explored over decades across both national and international contexts

Central to the exhibition is Parr’s iconic series Common Sense (1999), an installation of 270 colour-saturated close-up photographs that zoom in on global consumer culture – from fast food and tourist sites to personal decoration and social stereotypes.

The series Autoportrait (2002) brings together three decades of portraits of Martin Parr – taken by street photographers, studio photographers, and photo booths all over the world – through which he sought to highlight the many different shapes, forms and traditions of global portrait photography.

Visitors will also be able to discover The Non-Conformists (mid-1970s), his early documentation of rural English communities in black and white, and his breakthrough series The Last Resort (1983-85), which marks Parr’s turn to colour and focus on the British seaside. In addition to the photographic series, the exhibition will feature a reading room in which visitors can immerse themselves in Parr’s numerous photobook publications.