Gerald Incandela has long stood apart as an artist who reshaped the boundaries between photography and painting. From the beginning of his career in the early 1970s, he rejected the prevailing ideals of
straight photography—a movement that celebrated clarity and unaltered representation—and instead pursued an approach rooted in gesture, emotion, and transformation. Working within the darkroom as if it were a painter’s studio, Incandela created what he calls
photographic drawings, images that blur the line between the mechanical and the handmade. His prints carry the marks of his process, filled with movement, energy, and a distinct sense of authorship.
Before settling in the United States in 1977, Incandela lived and worked in Berlin and London, cities that shaped his early artistic vision. His rise to recognition came swiftly when the visionary curator Sam Wagstaff invited him to exhibit at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in 1978, giving him a dedicated room alongside
Robert Mapplethorpe—a rare honor that underscored his singular approach to the medium. Around the same time, his exhibitions at The Kitchen, New York’s influential avant-garde space, further solidified his position as a creative force pushing the limits of photographic form.
Even today, Incandela continues to explore the expressive potential of photography from his studios in Connecticut and California. Each print he creates remains a one-of-a-kind object, alive with texture and intuition. The exhibition traces his artistic evolution through three distinct series: the poetic landscapes and portraits of the 1970s and 1980s; the monumental figurative works of the following decades; and the intimate photographs taken on the set of Derek Jarman’s film
Caravaggio (1986), marking forty years of their extraordinary collaboration. Together, these works reaffirm Incandela’s lifelong belief that photography is, above all, an act of creation.
Image:
© Gerald Incandela