Todd Gray: Portals, presented at Perrotin Los Angeles from March 21 to May 30, 2026, gathers a new body of photographic assemblages by Todd Gray. The exhibition unfolds as a meditation on the shifting conditions of Black identity across geography and time. Drawing on landscapes, architectural fragments, and historical references, Gray constructs layered compositions that refuse a single viewpoint. Instead, the works evoke a network of relationships linking Europe, West Africa, and the Americas, suggesting that identity and history emerge through movement rather than fixed definition.
Gray’s method relies on the assembly of disparate photographic elements into carefully structured tableaux. Formal gardens, Renaissance interiors, coastal landscapes, and remnants of colonial architecture appear within the same frame, sometimes bordered by ornate or improvised frames that extend the visual dialogue. In
Paradox of Liberty (Monticello, Elmina, Akwidaa), palm trees photographed in Ghana intersect with a marble likeness of Thomas Jefferson and the entrance to a dungeon at Elmina Castle. Through these juxtapositions, Gray draws attention to the intertwined legacies of Enlightenment ideals, colonial expansion, and the transatlantic slave trade. Landscapes associated with beauty and leisure appear alongside sites marked by violence and displacement, revealing histories that remain embedded within the visual fabric of the Atlantic world.
Photography occupies a complicated place in Gray’s practice. The medium emerged in the nineteenth century alongside expanding colonial systems, often serving as a tool for classification and surveillance. Gray approaches the camera with an acute awareness of this legacy. By layering images, shifting scale, and incorporating visual “glitches” drawn from damaged digital files, he transforms the photograph into an unstable field where meaning remains open and relational. These assemblages resist narrative closure, encouraging viewers to navigate visual connections that unfold across continents and centuries.
The title
Portals reflects this approach. A portal marks a threshold, an opening between different spaces or states of awareness. Gray’s compositions operate in precisely this manner: each image acts as an entry point into overlapping cultural histories, personal memory, and speculative imagination. Rather than isolating a single moment, the works suggest a continuous flow in which past events echo within the present. Landscapes, monuments, and bodies become passages through which multiple stories circulate, forming a dynamic vision of diasporic experience.
Image:
The Promise (Ghana, Rome, Gorée), detail, 2026. Four UV pigment prints on Dibond in artist’s frames. ©Todd Gray. Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.