Martin Frank: Gradient, on view at Soho Photo Gallery from February 4 to 28, 2026, presents a meditative exploration of form, tone, and transformation. Drawing inspiration from both the literal and metaphorical meanings of "gradient," Frank’s series traces a journey from representation to abstraction, inviting viewers to consider how objects, surfaces, and light evolve over space and perception.
At the start, the series presents images of a distressed steam engine in Paterson, New Jersey, captured with precise attention to its industrial geometry. Riveted lines, perpendicular beams, and stamped letters dominate the frame, grounding the work in tangible structure. As the eye moves across the series, these architectural details gradually dissolve into textured surfaces, rusted planes, and fractured signage. Splattered paint and natural decay interrupt the mechanical order, guiding the viewer toward an emergent surreal landscape where the boundary between the literal and the imagined blurs.
The gradient also manifests in Frank’s meticulous handling of tonal range. Each hand-coated platinum print moves from deep blacks through subtle grays to luminous whites, mirroring the visual shift from concrete machinery to abstracted surfaces. This careful modulation of light and shadow heightens the sense of progression, emphasizing both the physical and emotional rhythms embedded in industrial decay.
Frank’s practice combines two decades of large-format analog photography with a fascination for alternative processes, inspired by the works of
Edward Steichen. His approach foregrounds patience, craft, and the contemplative possibilities of slow observation. The resulting prints reward extended viewing, revealing detail, texture, and nuance with each encounter.
In
Gradient, Martin Frank offers more than industrial portraiture: he creates a visual meditation on transformation, entropy, and perception. The series encourages viewers to trace subtle shifts in form, texture, and tone, discovering the poetry hidden in machinery, rust, and light. These images affirm photography’s power to turn everyday structures into spaces of reflection and wonder.
Image:
Gradient 4, Courtesy of Soho Photo Gallery © Martin Frank