John Coplans brings renewed attention to one of the most radical and uncompromising bodies of self-portraiture in the history of photography. Presented as an installation devoted entirely to his late works, the exhibition foregrounds Coplans’s sustained examination of the aging body as both subject and material. Created over several decades, these photographs reject idealization and instead insist on presence, weight, and physical truth.
Coplans’s self-portraits are immediately striking for what they withhold. His face is never shown. Rather than offering expression or identity through recognizable features, he fragments his body into parts—hands, feet, torso, back—rendered at monumental scale. Wrinkles, sagging skin, scars, and folds become landscapes of lived experience. By removing the face, Coplans dismantles conventional portraiture and redirects attention toward the body as a site of time, endurance, and vulnerability.
The work confronts deeply ingrained cultural anxieties surrounding aging, masculinity, and visibility. In a visual culture that privileges youth and smoothness, Coplans places his older body front and center, unembellished and unapologetic. The large prints amplify every detail, transforming what is often hidden or dismissed into something confrontational and dignified. These images do not seek sympathy or nostalgia; they assert the legitimacy of aging as a subject worthy of sustained attention.
Technically rigorous and formally precise, Coplans’s photographs often consist of multiple panels that echo classical sculpture and modernist abstraction. The body becomes both sculptural and resolutely human, oscillating between form and flesh. This tension gives the work its power, situating it within broader conversations about art history, self-representation, and the limits of beauty.
Installed on the Gallery’s fourth floor,
John Coplans offers a rare opportunity to encounter these works in dialogue with one another, emphasizing their cumulative force. Seen together, the photographs form a sustained meditation on time’s passage and the courage required to face it directly. Coplans’s legacy endures as a reminder that honesty, rigor, and self-scrutiny remain among photography’s most enduring strengths.
Image:
John Coplans, Frieze, No. 4, Three Panels, 1994. Nine gelatin silver prints on board. Yale University Art Gallery, Gift of Robinson A. Grover, B.A. 1958, M.S.L. 1975, and Nancy D. Grover. © The John Coplans Trust