Caroline Gray: Dancing Deeply, Dream is presented from February 24 through March 30, 2026 at Skidmore Contemporary Art. The exhibition gathers a recent body of work devoted to underwater dancers, images that blur the boundary between choreography and current. Within the gallery, viewers encounter photographs that seem to hover between stillness and motion, where bodies drift in luminous suspension and the surface of the water becomes a shifting mirror.
California-based photographer Caroline Gray approaches her subjects with a painter’s sensitivity to light, color, and atmosphere. Beneath the surface, gravity relinquishes its authority. Fabric billows, limbs arc and recoil, hair traces calligraphic lines through the water. The dancers’ gestures expand and contract in response to unseen tides, creating compositions that feel both spontaneous and carefully resolved. Gray describes a fascination with the sensuousness of the human body in water, and her images convey that captivation through soft tonal gradations and radiant highlights.
The work resonates with the dreamlike experimentation associated with photographers such as
André Kertész, while also recalling the theatrical aquatic tableaux of contemporary artists like Christy Lee Rogers. Yet Gray maintains a distinct visual language. Her underwater realm does not function as spectacle alone; it becomes a contemplative space where human presence meets the immensity of the natural world. The figures appear at once powerful and vulnerable, enveloped by a medium that both supports and obscures them.
Exhibited in California and the United Kingdom, Gray’s photographs reflect an ongoing dialogue between body and environment. In
Dancing Deeply, Dream, water serves as collaborator rather than backdrop. The resulting images suggest that identity, like motion beneath the surface, remains fluid—shaped by light, breath, and the quiet pull of unseen currents.
Image:
Caroline Gray, Dancing With Light
63 x 57 inches, 2014 photograph © Caroline Gray