Dan Estabrook: Forever & Never, on view at Gitterman Gallery from February 7 to March 28, 2026, offers a richly layered journey through more than three decades of image-making. Anchored by the release of Estabrook’s first major monograph, the exhibition gathers works that feel at once timeless and insistently present. Drawing from early photographic processes and mixed media, these images summon the spirit of the nineteenth century while engaging contemporary questions of identity, desire, and perception.
Estabrook’s practice thrives in the tension between the seen and the imagined. His photographs often hover between the theatrical and the supernatural, where humor quietly unsettles melancholy and beauty brushes against the macabre. Handmade surfaces, visible gestures, and deliberate imperfections invite slow looking, reminding viewers that photography was once an act of touch as much as sight. In an era dominated by frictionless digital images, this work insists on the physical, sensual nature of photographic creation.
The exhibition mirrors the structure of the monograph, unfolding across three interwoven chapters. Little Devils reflects on photography’s early entanglement with drawing, embracing experimentation and visual mischief. Ghosts & Models turns toward the intimate and sometimes unstable relationship between photographer and subject, evoking presence, absence, and projection. Broken Fingers shifts focus to the photograph as an object, where damaged edges, layered materials, and sculptural interventions echo the vulnerability and resilience of the human body itself.
Rooted in Estabrook’s long engagement with alternative processes such as calotype, gum bichromate, and albumen printing,
Forever & Never celebrates photography as an evolving, deeply human craft. The exhibition is less a retrospective than a constellation—ideas and images looping across time, resisting linear narratives. Together, the works form an anchor to curiosity, authenticity, and the enduring magic of photography, where meaning is built slowly, by hand, and meant to last far beyond the moment of exposure.
Image:
A Void, 2009. Salt print with cut-out. Courtesy of the Gitterman Gallery © Dan Estabrook