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The Abstract Image, on view at Praxis Photo Arts Center from January 20 to February 14, 2026, brings together photographic works that deliberately step away from description and toward visual exploration. Rather than anchoring meaning in identifiable subjects, the exhibition emphasizes photography as a language of form—one shaped by light, color, texture, rhythm, and spatial tension. Here, the camera becomes less a tool of documentation than an instrument for inquiry, revealing how abstraction can reframe the act of seeing itself.
Across the exhibition, images unfold through surfaces and structures that invite sustained attention. Shadows dissolve into geometry, color fields pulse with quiet energy, and lines intersect in ways that feel both deliberate and intuitive. These photographs do not ask to be read quickly; instead, they reward lingering observation. By removing the certainty of representation, the works encourage viewers to respond sensorially and emotionally, allowing perception to guide interpretation rather than narrative or context.
The artists featured employ a wide range of lens-based strategies, from experimental camera techniques to darkroom interventions and digitally mediated processes. Some images originate in the physical world but are transformed through framing and reduction, while others approach pure abstraction, untethered from any recognizable reference. Together, these approaches demonstrate how abstraction has long been embedded in the photographic tradition, from early modernist experiments to contemporary practices that continue to test the medium’s limits.
Juried by the Praxis Directors,
The Abstract Image reflects a commitment to photography as both a disciplined craft and an open field of experimentation. The exhibition affirms abstraction not as an escape from reality, but as another way of engaging with it—one that values ambiguity, formal intelligence, and visual clarity. By focusing on how images are built rather than what they depict, the exhibition highlights photography’s enduring capacity to surprise, challenge, and expand our understanding of visual experience.
Image:
Out of Control , USA. © Bernice Williams