Holden Luntz Gallery presents
Best in Show @ JL Modern, an exhibition that honors the timeless bond between humans and their canine companions. Bringing together photographs created across more than a century, the show explores how dogs—whether posed, wandering, or entirely unaware of the camera—have shaped the emotional and visual language of photography. Here, dogs emerge not only as subjects, but as partners in storytelling, helping artists reveal humor, tenderness, and the subtle rhythms of daily life.
At the heart of the exhibition are images rooted in humanist and documentary traditions. Early street scenes, quiet neighborhoods, and improvised encounters capture dogs moving naturally through the world, offering moments of spontaneity that enrich the narrative. In these photographs, the animals often become silent guides, leading viewers through landscapes of childhood, friendship, and fleeting urban interludes. Their presence carries an authenticity that anchors each frame, reminding us that the simplest gestures can evoke lasting meaning.
The exhibition also considers how fashion and celebrity photography have embraced dogs as unexpected agents of charm. A poised figure crossing a station with a sleek hound or a glamorous actress sharing a candid moment with her pet shows how canine presence can disarm even the most carefully constructed image. Within these scenes, dogs create openings—revealing personality, softening composure, or adding a note of surprise that lingers in the viewer’s memory.
Playfulness and experimentation appear throughout the exhibition as well, especially in works that use dogs as catalysts for visual invention. Performative, humorous, or architecturally composed, these images demonstrate how a simple shift in scale, gesture, or setting can transform an ordinary moment into something extraordinary. Spanning vintage prints to contemporary works, Best in Show celebrates the enduring capacity of dogs to shape mood, deepen narrative, and connect us to shared experiences that transcend time.
Image:
Elliott Erwitt — England, 1974
printed later
Silver Gelatin Photograph
11 x 14 in, at JL Modern Gallery © Elliott Erwitt