Pello Irazu: Matter marks a new chapter in the Spanish artist’s ongoing investigation into the physical and conceptual weight of images. Presented at Yancey Richardson Gallery from March 5 through April 11, 2026, the exhibition brings together recent photographic and sculptural works that press against the traditional boundaries separating image, object, and space. Long recognized as a key figure in the renewal of Basque sculpture since the 1980s, Irazu extends his formal language by intensifying the dialogue between photography and three-dimensional form.
Working within the studio as both subject and laboratory, Irazu constructs sculptures from everyday materials—cardboard, wood blocks, provisional supports—casting and painting them before reassembling the elements into spare, architectonic structures. He then photographs these arrangements and intervenes directly on the prints with painted lines and textured fields of color. In
Matter, these interventions expand into complex lattices that evoke woodgrain, metal, and plastic, partially concealing the underlying studio scenes. The photograph no longer functions as a transparent window but as a dense surface where representation and material presence collide.
The accompanying wall sculptures echo this vocabulary of layered planes and intersecting angles. Painted to mirror the textures embedded in the photographs, they destabilize the viewer’s sense of orientation, shifting according to perspective and light. Rather than offering a fixed form, the works suggest an image in flux—something constructed, deconstructed, and reassembled before our eyes. In several new pieces, Irazu incorporates silkscreened photographs of his own hands at work onto acrylic elements integrated into the sculptures, foregrounding the act of making as both subject and structure.
By dramatizing the mechanics of creation, Irazu questions whether an image can possess mass and occupy the same experiential space as the viewer.
Matter ultimately proposes that images are not immaterial illusions but composite forms—built, fractured, and reconstituted—capable of embodying both physical substance and conceptual depth.
Image:
Pello Irazu, Demolition Strategies 2, 2025. Acrylic paint on photograph, 25 1/2 x 17 3/4 inches. © Pello Irazu, courtesy of the Yancey Richardson Gallery