Home Without Boundaries
How do NYC’s public spaces evoke feelings, memories, and rituals of home?
Our 2026 Photo Urbanism theme, Home Without Boundaries, explores how shared spaces of gathering create community and a sense of home and belonging. In partnership with the Macaulay Honors College at CUNY, eight students were selected to participate in a paid week-long photography workshop examining this prompt, led by local photographer and Design Trust Photo Urbanism Fellow Barnabas Crosby. The final exhibition of student work will be on display at Macaulay in June 2026, learn more here and explore the digital archive below.
This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and the New York State Council on the Arts.
The Macaulay Honors College Photo Urbanism Fellows 2026
Macaulay Fellows
2026
Led by Teaching Fellow Barnabas Crosby
Barnabas Crosby is a Brooklyn-based educator, visual storyteller, and native of Cleveland. Trained as a playwright and dramaturg, he leverages education, art, and media to aid young people crafting their individual and cultural narratives using photography and creative writing.
In 2021, Barnabas was named the Photo Urbanism Fellow at Design Trust for Public Space, showcasing his work at the Nasdaq Building and the Grand Army Library in Brooklyn. In 2023, he curated the youth-led photography exhibition “A New Place Like Home” at the Museum of the City of New York and later installed a series of images at Lehman College School of Education, documenting the journey of prospective teacher candidates. His work has been featured in Fortune, International Business Magazine, and CAMOC: Museums of Cities Review. Barnabas continues to teach photography at Harlem School of the Arts and serves as a professor in childhood special education at Kingsborough Community College.
Barnabas returned to the Photo Urbanism program as a Teaching Fellow in 2026 to lead a cohort of young photographers through a guided paid fellowship, examining photography as a tool for personal research and urban storytelling. Click below to read their artist statements:
Home Without Boundaries Final Exhibition Digital Archive