4044 Dean Martin Dr.
On view from March 25 to May 31, 2026, the exhibition
Christopher Lowell at FAS44 Gallery presents an intimate encounter with a photographer whose work resists haste and rewards quiet attention. Rooted in intuition and memory, Lowell’s photographs unfold as fragments of lived experience, shaped by personal history and a deep sensitivity to atmosphere. Working primarily with medium-format film, he approaches photography as a reflective practice, allowing time, chance, and emotion to guide each image.
Lowell is widely recognized for his distinctive silver-gelatin prints, which lend his photographs a tactile presence and a sense of permanence. In an era dominated by speed and digital immediacy, his commitment to traditional processes feels both deliberate and quietly radical. The tonal richness of his prints—dense blacks, delicate highlights, and nuanced midtones—creates images that seem to breathe, hovering between the seen and the remembered. These works often evoke places and moments without fully defining them, encouraging viewers to project their own memories into the frame.
Themes of nostalgia and autobiography run throughout the exhibition, yet the photographs avoid sentimentality. Instead, Lowell focuses on the emotional residue of experience: a shifting shadow, a solitary figure, a landscape touched by time. His compositions balance the ethereal with the grounded, revealing how ordinary environments can carry profound emotional weight. Each image feels less like documentation and more like a quiet meditation on presence, absence, and the passage of time.
A public reception on opening day will mark the beginning of the exhibition, offering audiences the opportunity to engage directly with the artist and his process. Together, the works on view form a cohesive yet open-ended narrative, one that reflects Lowell’s ongoing exploration of memory and perception. At FAS44 Gallery, this exhibition stands as an invitation to slow down, look closely, and rediscover the enduring power of photographic craftsmanship and personal vision.
Image:
Christopher Lowell, Thirty-One Days 39
Gelatin silver print © Christopher Lowell