Nailya Alexander Gallery in New York presents its
Holiday Show, a carefully curated exhibition that brings together photographs by
Pentti Sammallahti, Christopher Burkett, and
Alexey Titarenko. United by a deep commitment to traditional darkroom practice, the three artists share an approach rooted in patience, craft, and a reverence for the physical print. Each photograph is handmade, resulting in nuanced tonalities and subtle variations that affirm the photograph as a singular object rather than a reproducible image.
Alexey Titarenko’s New York works offer a lyrical meditation on the city, shaped by his masterful command of experimental darkroom techniques. Through partial bleaching, selective gold toning, and the Sabattier effect, his prints seem to hover between reality and memory. Scenes such as winter views of Central Park unfold in hushed light, where trees, mist, and architectural rhythm merge into a contemplative whole. These images feel less like documents of place than inward reflections, where the atmosphere of the city mirrors the artist’s own emotional register.
Pentti Sammallahti’s photographs move effortlessly across geographies, yet remain deeply anchored in a sense of quiet observation. Whether made in Northern Europe, Asia, or the United States, his images reveal a gentle attentiveness to animals, landscapes, and fleeting moments of harmony. There is an unforced lyricism in his work, as if each photograph were discovered rather than constructed. This restrained approach allows space for memory and feeling, inviting viewers to project their own experiences into the scenes he records.
Christopher Burkett’s practice stands as a testament to devotion and precision. Working exclusively with Cibachrome paper, he has spent decades refining a method that yields extraordinary depth and luminosity in color. His large-format photographs of natural forms are defined by their radiant clarity, where light seems to emanate from within the subject itself. In this
Holiday Show, Burkett’s glowing prints, alongside the tonal subtlety of Sammallahti and the poetic atmosphere of Titarenko, create a contemplative dialogue about light, time, and the enduring power of traditional photographic craft.
Image:
Alexey Titarenko (b. 1962)
Central Park in Winter, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir, New York, 2024, at Nailya Alexander Gallery New York © Alexey Titarenko