Critical Collection: Image Intelligence and Empire
By (Author) Evan Hume
Foreword by Lily Brewer
Daylight Books
Daylight Books
10th December 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Photographs: collections
Individual photographers
History of art
Photography and photographs
Hardback
96
Width 228mm, Height 254mm
Images mediate political operations, public and covert. It is difficult, if not impossible, to imagine the most significant events of the last century without the photographic forms in which they were captured. Lesser known and suppressed activities that have greatly impacted modern global power dynamics also leave photographic traces, and in many cases, photography has been at the center of clandestine actions by state and para-political actors. Critical Collection is an assemblage of declassified archival photographs and other found images processed and re-contextualized by artist and researcher Evan Hume. He obtains this source material primarily from the Central Intelligence Agency, National Archives, and National Reconnaissance Office. With photographic intelligence gathering at its core, Hume's work expands centrifugally, making unexpected visual and conceptual connections that form a complex web of fact and speculation. Hume employs experimental imaging methods to alter and combine the amassed photographs, exhibiting the malleability of images and historical narratives. At a time when there is a seemingly infinite stream of images at one's fingertips, Critical Collection compels viewers to look closely at the once-secret photographic systems that have shaped the world and imagine what remains unseen.
Evan Hume is an artist and educator living in Ames, Iowa, where he is Assistant Professor of Photography at Iowa State University. He earned his BFA from Virginia Commonwealth University and MFA from George Washington University. Raised in the Washington, DC area, Hume's approach to photography is informed by the experience of living in the nation's political center for much of his life and focuses on the medium's use as an instrument of the military-industrial complex. He has exhibited widely in solo and group exhibitions and his work has been featured by publications such as Aperture, Der Greif, Financial Times, and Fisheye. Hume's first monograph, Viewing Distance, was published by Daylight Books in 2021.