Arne Svenson: Sock Monkeys and Strays
December 15, 2025 – January 31, 2026
[BOSTON, MA] — Robert Klein Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition by acclaimed New York–based photographer Arne Svenson. The exhibition brings renewed attention to two of Svenson’s most poignant and psychologically resonant series, Sock Monkeys and Strays. On view from December 15, 2025 through January 31, 2026, this marks Svenson’s third solo exhibition at the gallery.
An artist’s talk will take place on January 10, 2026, from 2–4 pm, featuring a conversation between Arne Svenson and photo historian Jennifer Stoots, presented in cahoots with Stoots.
Known for his meticulous, painterly approach and shaped by his background in special education, Svenson’s practice is rooted in distilling the psychological essence of his subjects—whether human figures observed from a distance or discarded objects found at the margins of everyday life.
Sock Monkeys: Portraits of Personalities
In the Sock Monkeys series, Svenson elevates humble, handmade dolls into subjects of high-art portraiture. Selecting from a collection of nearly 2,000 sock monkeys, he used a large-format camera to photograph each figure in the tradition of 19th-century black-and-white portrait photography.
Removed from childhood and play, the sock monkey becomes an ambiguous surrogate for the human figure. Isolated, posed, and meticulously lit, these figures hover between humor and unease. Their stitched expressions suggest character without biography, inviting viewers to project emotion, narrative, and vulnerability onto what is fundamentally an inanimate object. The series exemplifies Svenson’s long-standing interest in how photographic framing can animate the overlooked and provoke complex psychological responses.
Strays: The Beauty of the Abandoned
Complementing Sock Monkeys is Strays, a series featuring portraits of kittens borrowed from a rescue facility in upstate New York. Here, Svenson turns his lens toward beings—and objects—that exist on the periphery, having lost their place within social or domestic structures.
As with his celebrated and controversial series The Neighbors, Strays reflects Svenson’s investigative eye, revealing beauty and narrative within the banality of the everyday. The work asks viewers to consider the history and dignity of the marginalized and left behind. Svenson poses a fundamental question:
“How can I photograph kittens in a way that connects to the underlying theme in all my work—to cast light on the unseen, the ignored, and the overlooked? Was it possible to ignore cuteness and find the kitten’s inner life, its backstory?”
Together, Sock Monkeys and Strays explore themes of projection, presence, and the fragile boundary between observer and observed. Whether confronting a toy imbued with imagined life or an animal asserting its own autonomy, Svenson’s photographs challenge viewers to reconsider how meaning is constructed through looking—and how photography mediates intimacy without narration.
About Arne Svenson
Arne Svenson (b. 1952) is a self-taught photographer whose work has been exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; SFMOMA; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver; and the Andy Warhol Museum. He is the recipient of the prestigious Nannen Prize (2016) and the author of several books, including Sock Monkeys and The Neighbors. Svenson’s work is widely exhibited and collected internationally and continues to examine perception, surveillance, and the ethics of seeing, characterized by a profound sensitivity to light, gesture, and the boundaries of the photographic gaze.
About Jennifer Stoots
Jennifer L. Stoots is an art appraiser and photo historian with over 30 years of experience in the museum and gallery field and more than two decades specializing in photography appraisal. She appraises documentary and fine art photographs, photographic archives, and contemporary art, and regularly lectures on the economic history of fine art and the photography market, as well as legacy and estate planning for artists. Stoots holds an MA in the History of Art & Design from Pratt Institute and a BA in Art History from the University of Oregon. She earned her appraisal credentials from NYU’s Appraisal Studies Program and is a Certified Member of the Appraisers Association of America (AAA).
About Robert Klein Gallery
Founded in 1980, Robert Klein Gallery ranks among the world’s most prestigious venues for fine art photography, with early exhibitions of Diane Arbus, Annie Leibovitz, Sally Mann, and Hiroshi Sugimoto. The gallery maintains a dynamic inventory of 19th-, 20th-, and 21st-century photography and participates in major international art fairs including Paris Photo, The Armory Show – Modern, and The AIPAD Photography Show. With decades of experience and deep scholarly expertise, the gallery is committed to serving as a leading platform for the photographic arts.
Exhibition Details
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Venue: Robert Klein Gallery
38 Newbury Street, Boston, MA 02116
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Exhibition Dates: December 15, 2025 – January 31, 2026
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Artist’s Talk: January 10, 2026, 2–4 pm
A conversation with Arne Svenson and Jennifer Stoots
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Media Inquiries:
inquiry@robertkleingallery.com
617.267.7997