Robert Mapplethorpe, on view from March 5 through April 18, 2026 at Gladstone Gallery, revisits the powerful visual language of one of the most influential photographers of the late twentieth century. Organized in collaboration with the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, the exhibition presents a selection of the artist’s most iconic images in newly produced large-scale prints. Many appear in a striking 60 × 60 inch square format, echoing Mapplethorpe’s long-held fascination with scale and the technical possibilities of photographic printing.
Throughout his career,
Robert Mapplethorpe pursued a singular balance between classical beauty and provocative subject matter. His photographs combine sculptural precision with an almost obsessive attention to form, light, and tonal contrast. Working primarily with the square format of a Hasselblad camera, he created compositions defined by symmetry, geometry, and dramatic chiaroscuro. The images presented in the exhibition highlight recurring motifs that shaped his work: elegant studies of flowers, classical sculpture, nude bodies, and striking portraits of cultural figures who helped define the creative energy of New York during the 1970s and 1980s.
Portraiture played a particularly important role in Mapplethorpe’s practice. His camera captured artists, performers, and musicians with an intensity that blended glamour, intimacy, and theatrical presence. Among the figures he photographed were close collaborators such as Patti Smith, whose iconic portrait later appeared on the cover of the album
Horses, and the magnetic performer Grace Jones. These images documented a vibrant cultural moment while reflecting the photographer’s fascination with identity, style, and self-presentation.
Mapplethorpe also turned the camera toward himself throughout his life, creating a sequence of self-portraits that range from playful experimentation to solemn confrontation with mortality. In later works, the artist addressed themes of vulnerability and endurance with stark clarity. Alongside these personal images, the exhibition includes some of his most recognizable photographs, including a powerful depiction of a torn American flag illuminated by sunlight—an image that resonates with both beauty and tension.
More than three decades after his death, Mapplethorpe’s work continues to shape conversations about photography, aesthetics, and artistic freedom. This exhibition emphasizes the lasting force of his vision, revealing how precision, daring subject matter, and a relentless pursuit of perfection combined to redefine the possibilities of photographic art.
Image:
Robert Mapplethorpe, Self Portrait, 1980
Silver gelatin print.
© Robert Mappplethorpe Foundation