Showcasing fifteen historical photographs from the period of the Cold War, the exhibition focuses on the complex engagement between the two major powers: the US and the USSR, that went beyond hostile rhetoric and deep-seated mistrust. A 1974 summit of Soviet leader Brezhnev and President Ford, a Pepsi-Cola factory in southern Russia, paintings from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Moscow – these historical moments signaled to both nations: “Relax, work is being done to avoid a nuclear war.” While certain political forces in both countries incited ideological rivalry and antagonism, other trends steered international politics towards peaceful exchanges and cultural dialogues. Each of these rare photographs features citizens from both the USSR and the US in a friendly encounter. They show that even during the height of the arms and space races, conflicts can be managed and a conversation is possible.

Frenemy Moments: Soviet-American Conversations in Cold War Photographs is on view in the Robert J. Brokop Gallery January 17 – April 26, 2026.

US President Gerald Ford and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev meet in Vladivostok, 1974     
Photograph  
11 ½ x 15 ½ in
TMORA Research Collection 
Central Army Club plays against the New York Rangers in the Super Series ’76, 1975-76 
Photograph  
11 ½ x 15 ½ in
TMORA Research Collection 
An exhibition of 100 masterpieces from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art opens in the Hermitage Museum in Leningrad, 1975
Photograph  
11 ½ x 15 ½ in
TMORA Research Collection