Anthony Friedkin: Ex Post Facto, on view at Von Lintel Gallery from January 24 to March 7, 2026, offers a rigorous and deeply personal retrospective of one of Los Angeles’s most committed photographic voices. Working exclusively in full-frame black-and-white, Friedkin has spent more than five decades using photography as both a mirror and a compass, grounding his work in lived experience, physical presence, and a profound respect for craft. From an early age, the darkroom became not just a workspace but a place of authorship, where images were shaped deliberately, by hand, and with intention.
Los Angeles emerges throughout the exhibition as more than a setting; it is an active force that organizes movement, desire, and contradiction. Friedkin’s city is expansive and intimate at once, a place where freedom and risk coexist and where the boundaries between pleasure and danger are often porous. His photographs reveal a landscape that resists simplification, shaped by sunlight and shadow, performance and vulnerability, secrecy and exposure.
At the core of the exhibition is the long-running Surfing Essay, begun in 1975, which reads as both a visual diary and a meditation on obsession. Friedkin photographs the ocean from within its rituals, attuned to repetition, endurance, and the quiet extremity of devotion. Waves become sculptural forces, surfers both fragile and defiant, and the sea a space where discipline and surrender meet. The images carry the weight of participation, shaped by the photographer’s own immersion in the culture he documents.
Equally vital are works from the Gay Essay, a groundbreaking series begun in the early 1970s that offers an insider’s view of gay life in Los Angeles before visibility was formalized. These photographs are marked by trust, tenderness, and shared authorship, presenting lives not as symbols but as relationships. Complementing this are images from brothels, private interiors, and Hollywood sets, where bodies, labor, and performance unfold without moral distance or theatrical gloss.
Taken together,
Ex Post Facto affirms Anthony Friedkin’s position as a photographer of presence—one who enters worlds fully, listens closely, and leaves behind images that are as honest as they are enduring.
Image:
Woman by the Pool, Beverly Hills, CA
1975
Archival pigment print
20 x 30 inches (50.8 x 76.2 cm) © Anthony Friedkin