2525 Michigan Ave. #A6
Marshall Gallery presents
Albarrán Cabrera: Windows to the Unexpected, an exhibition that invites viewers to step into a world shaped by contemplation, nuance, and quiet wonder. On view from January 17 to March 14, 2026, the exhibition marks the fourth solo presentation of the Spanish duo at the gallery and brings together works from their most recent series,
The Indestructible, alongside select photographs spanning their collaborative career. Together, these images form a sequence of visual thresholds—moments where the familiar gently dissolves into uncertainty.
Composed of Ángel Albarrán and Anna Cabrera, the duo has long pursued a poetic approach to photography that favors intuition over explanation. Their images are not meant to be read quickly or definitively, but encountered slowly, allowing meaning to emerge through sustained looking. In
The Indestructible, nature appears not as a subject to be described, but as a presence that endures—quietly resilient amid impermanence and change. Landscapes, fragments of light, and suspended forms evoke memory and time as fluid states, hovering between what is seen and what is felt.
A defining element of Albarrán Cabrera’s practice lies in their extraordinary attention to materiality. Through meticulous printing processes and the use of hand-coated gold-leafed papers, their photographs take on a luminous, tactile quality that shifts with movement and light. Pigment inks interact with reflective surfaces, creating depth and vibrancy that resist reproduction and insist on physical presence. These works encourage viewers to slow down, to consider the photograph not merely as an image, but as an object shaped by care and intention.
This exhibition coincides with the release of the artists’ eighth book, underscoring their sustained commitment to the photobook as an extension of their visual language. Influenced by literature, philosophy, and cinema, Albarrán Cabrera continue to build a body of work that defies easy categorization.
Windows to the Unexpected offers a reflective pause—a space where perception is unsettled and renewed, and where photography becomes a quiet act of endurance.
Image:
Kairos #4021, 2015
Cyanotype over Platinum palladium print © Albarrán Cabrera