The exhibition
Deck the Walls 2025 at Catherine Couturier Gallery invites viewers into a vibrant celebration of photographic variety — from vintage black-and-white prints to contemporary color images — reflecting the multiplicity of vision, technique, and aesthetic across decades. Running from December 6, 2025 to January 10, 2026, this 28th annual group show offers a rich, eclectic mix that speaks to both collectors and casual admirers alike, echoing the gallery’s long-standing commitment to accessibility, diversity, and discovery.
Among this year’s highlights is a series by
Diana Cheren Nygren, titled
Please Come In, which transforms playful Korean business mascots into uncanny shadowbox tableaux under acrylic — whimsical, nostalgic, and full of personality. Nygren’s work brings humor and cultural resonance into the mix, reminding us how everyday symbols can carry layers of meaning when reimagined through art.
The exhibition also welcomes the surreal, analog collages of
Sander Vos. Vos’s dreamlike compositions — crafted with precision and an unmistakable sense of otherworldly elegance — invoke questions of memory, fantasy, and perception, offering a striking contrast to the documentary clarity of more traditional photography. His inclusion highlights how contemporary practitioners continue to stretch the boundaries of what a photograph can be.
Local and regional voices are well represented too. Houston-based artist Charles Ford revisits his works from the 1980s and 1990s, offering viewers a chance to reflect on how time shapes both image and memory. Contemporary gelatin silver prints by Gary Watson and fresh work by Emily Neville Fisher add further depth and texture to the show, creating a layered experience that spans generations of artistic practice.
With its variety of styles — documentary, collage, conceptual, abstract, vintage, modern — and a broad price range,
Deck the Walls 2025 lives up to its reputation as an inclusive, spirited gathering of photographic voices. It’s a chance to witness how photography continues to evolve, transform, and surprise, while honoring its enduring roots in craft, vision, and human expression. The gallery welcomes all comers: whether you’re a seasoned collector, budding enthusiast, or simply curious, there’s something here for every eye and every story.
Image:
Charles Ford
Miami Beach, 1988
archival digital print on baryta paper
21 x 14 inches
open edition © Charles Ford