The Intimacy of Seeing: A Photographic Survey of Jean-Baptiste Huynh brings together a body of work shaped by patience, restraint, and an unwavering trust in light. Presented at Holden Luntz Gallery, the exhibition reveals Huynh’s ability to suspend subjects outside of time, allowing faces, forms, and surfaces to emerge with quiet intensity. His photographs resist immediacy; instead, they invite prolonged looking, where subtle shifts of shadow and luminosity become vehicles for contemplation rather than description.
Born to a French mother and a Vietnamese father, Huynh’s vision is informed by a dialogue between cultures and philosophies. Early guidance from
Irving Penn helped refine a language that is both rigorous and deeply personal, grounded in technical mastery yet open to metaphysical inquiry. Neutral backgrounds strip away context, leaving only presence. Whether portraying a human face, an animal, or a mineral form, Huynh treats each subject with equal gravity, suggesting that meaning arises not from hierarchy but from attention.
Over nearly three decades, Huynh has constructed an expansive atlas of gazes, traveling across continents to explore how individuality and universality coexist within the human face. His portraits do not explain; they listen. This approach extends to his still lifes and studies of nature, where the material world becomes a site of reflection on impermanence and renewal. Light, in Huynh’s work, functions as both physical phenomenon and metaphor—an agent of revelation that shapes how we see and how we remember.
Recent photographic and cinematic projects have deepened this inquiry, expanding his practice into immersive environments and long-form observation. From sacred architecture to remote landscapes, Huynh continues to explore how images can become spaces of encounter rather than mere representations.
The Intimacy of Seeing offers a rare opportunity to experience this trajectory as a cohesive whole, affirming Huynh’s belief that photography, at its most resonant, is not about capturing the world, but about entering into a sustained, reflective relationship with it.
Image:
Christian III
2004, printed 2025
Archival pigment photograph on baryta paper © Jean-Baptiste Huynh