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Cary Silverman: The Antisocialization Project, on view from March 11 to April 4, 2026 in the Main Gallery at Viewpoint Photographic Art Center, presents a quietly unsettling portrait of contemporary social life. Through a series of black-and-white photographs made in public and communal spaces, Silverman captures moments where people are physically together yet emotionally elsewhere, absorbed by glowing screens rather than the human presence beside them.
The images reveal a transformation so gradual it has become nearly invisible. Friends share tables without conversation, families sit together in practiced silence, and couples occupy the same space while living parallel digital lives. These scenes feel familiar, even mundane, yet collectively they point to a deeper shift in how attention, intimacy, and connection are negotiated today. The photographs do not condemn; instead, they observe with clarity and restraint, allowing viewers to recognize themselves within these moments of distracted togetherness.
Working exclusively in black and white, Silverman strips away visual excess to focus on gesture, posture, and distance. A bowed head, a glowing phone reflected in a face, the empty space between bodies—these subtle details become the emotional core of the work. Without color to soften or distract, the images emphasize the tension between proximity and isolation, revealing how easily presence can be replaced by perpetual elsewhere-ness in the digital age.
Silverman’s dual life as a physician and photographer informs his approach. As an ophthalmologist, he is dedicated to restoring physical vision; as an artist, he turns his attention to what we choose not to see. His camera becomes a diagnostic tool, examining habits that shape modern relationships and social instincts. Each photograph feels precise and deliberate, guided by patience, observation, and an understanding of human behavior.
The Antisocialization Project ultimately functions as both documentation and invitation. It asks viewers to pause, to notice their own reflexes, and to consider what is lost when attention drifts away from the immediate and the real. In these quiet, unguarded scenes, Silverman offers a mirror of contemporary life—and a gentle reminder of the power and vulnerability of genuine human connection.
Image:
© Cary Silverman