Ed van der Elsken. Up Close
From 19 June 2026
A cyclist cheekily sticking out her tongue, tough youths on Amsterdam's Nieuwendijk, young women in miniskirts. From The Netherlands to Cuba and Japan, Ed van der Elsken chased the same unfiltered energy. Different streets, a different time - and yet you recognise it.
He is one of the most beloved Dutch photographers of the twentieth century. But how did his pictures come about? What did he see that others missed? And what did he set aside, sometimes for years, before he was satisfied?
INTO HIS STUDIO
The exhibition Ed van der Elsken. Up Close takes you into his studio. Since 2019, the Rijksmuseum and the Nederlands Fotomuseum have looked after his personal archive together, and for the first time the material has been examined in full.
Alongside his best-known photographs, you'll see his handwritten notes, contact sheets covered in red marks, darkroom experiments and newly discovered book dummies.
SEARCHING, REFINING, STARTING OVER
Across nine galleries you follow him from his first reportages in the early 1950s to the making of his last photo book in the late 1980s. You see him searching, refining, starting over. Travelling to Cuba and Japan with the same curious gaze as in Amsterdam. Mulling over books that sometimes came into being, and sometimes never did.
In film fragments you hear him speak in his own words. Free-spirited, headstrong, and at times unsure.
A THOUSAND ATTEMPTS
What remains is the picture of a maker who was never quite done. Someone who didn't just record what was happening, but kept searching for a form that matched what he felt. He changed Dutch photography for good. Not through one perfect picture, but through a thousand attempts.
Thanks to
The exhibition Ed van der Elsken. Up Close is made possible in part by Anneke Hilhorst, the Familie Krouwels Fonds, het Conrad Whelan 42 Fund, and Jan and Trish de Bont through the Rijksmuseum Fonds.
19 June till 13 September 2026
PRICES
- Adults: € 25
- Free for 18 and under
- Free for ICOM
- Free for Friends
ADDRESS
Museumstraat 1
1071 XX Amsterdam
ACCESSIBILITY
Wheelchair access
Lifts on every floor
Guide dogs allowed
CASHLESS
The museum is cashless. You can only pay with a digital payment method or credit card.
FAQ
Boy and girl on a motorbike at the Nieuwmarkt, Amsterdam, 1958
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Beethovenstraat, Amsterdam, 1967
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Demonstration near Tokyo Station, Tokyo, 1964
1 | 6
Workers of a sawmill, Chile, 1971
1 | 6
Queen's Day, Dam, Amsterdam, 1980
1 | 6
Diderik Vijghstraat, Tiel, ca. 1970
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