Alan Gaynor: Our City, on view from February 17 through March 7, 2026 at Viridian Artists, presents a compelling exploration of New York City’s architectural identity through the lens of architect and photographer Alan Gaynor. This exhibition, Gaynor’s fifth solo show with the gallery, captures the city’s monumental structures with both precision and poetic sensibility, inviting viewers to experience Manhattan not merely as a backdrop but as an immersive, commanding presence.
The Cityscapes series featured in
Our City portrays skyscrapers as layered compositions of concrete, steel, and glass. Stripped of human figures, the photographs transform the urban landscape into an almost abstract orchestration of form and rhythm. From towering facades to reflections in glass surfaces, Gaynor’s images emphasize the interplay of scale, line, and light, revealing architectural nuances often overlooked in daily life. Drone-assisted perspectives, high-angle shots, and street-level views converge to create panoramas that are at once intimate and expansive.
Gaynor’s architectural background, including the founding of his firm in 1974, underpins his photographic approach. His work demonstrates a mastery of analog and digital techniques, delivering exceptional detail and tonal range in both black-and-white and color. Minimal manipulation ensures that each image retains clarity and objectivity, while compositional choices elevate the cityscape into a visual symphony, echoing Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s notion of architecture as “frozen music.” These photographs unfold like ambient scores, harmonizing rhythm, repetition, and scale into a contemplative visual experience.
Having exhibited widely since 2000, Gaynor studied with notable figures including John Sexton,
George Tice, and David Vestal, and his work has appeared in esteemed galleries and publications worldwide. Awards such as the 2012 Bronze International Loupe and recognition from Epson International underscore the quality and impact of his practice.
Our City solidifies Gaynor’s reputation as a photographer who transforms the familiar cityscape into a space of observation, reflection, and aesthetic resonance, offering viewers a renewed appreciation for the architectural heartbeat of New York.
Image:
Reflection of the Lipstick Bad, 1996. Archival pigment print, Ed. of 10, Image: 21.75 x 16.75 in. 1996 © Alan Gaynor, courtesy of Viridian Artists