The Shape of Things: Where Color Meets Form explores photography’s ability to construct a sense of depth, presence, and materiality through chromatic intensity and formal precision. Presented at Holden Luntz Gallery, the exhibition brings together artists who treat color not as embellishment but as structure—an active force that shapes how space is perceived and bodies are imagined. Within this dialogue, color becomes a threshold between the visible and the sensed, inviting viewers to reconsider how photographic images occupy physical and psychological space.
At the heart of the exhibition is the work of Christopher Bucklow, whose practice stands apart for its fusion of conceptual rigor and quiet introspection. Known for his use of pinhole photography, Bucklow creates images that feel both ancient and futuristic, grounded in simple optical principles yet charged with metaphysical inquiry. In his celebrated
Guests series, life-sized human silhouettes emerge from thousands of tiny apertures, each pinhole acting as a conduit through which light, time, and memory pass. The figures appear simultaneously solid and immaterial, suggesting presences shaped as much by absence as by form.
Bucklow’s background in art history and his early career at the Victoria & Albert Museum inform a practice deeply attuned to tradition, even as it pushes against conventional photographic methods. His work draws from cosmology, psychology, and spiritual philosophy, weaving together scientific observation and inner vision. Color in his images is never merely descriptive; it carries emotional weight, mapping interior states onto outward forms. Through this approach, photography becomes a tool for contemplating identity, consciousness, and the fragile boundary between self and other.
The Shape of Things situates Bucklow’s work within a broader exploration of how photographers translate three-dimensional experience into flat surfaces without sacrificing complexity or depth. The exhibition underscores photography’s enduring capacity to question perception itself—how we see, how we remember, and how form and color collaborate to give shape to the intangible. In an age of accelerated image consumption, these works ask for slowness, attention, and a renewed sensitivity to the quiet power of looking.
Image:
Tetrarch, 12.50pm, 23rd April, 2011
2011
Cibachrome photograph © Christopher Bucklow