JR: Horizons, presented at Perrotin Los Angeles from March 12 through April 25, 2026, brings together a selection of photographic works by the French artist
JR created across California. The exhibition reflects the artist’s long-standing interest in the horizon as both a visual and social concept. In JR’s work, the horizon is less a distant line than a point of encounter—an ever-shifting boundary where landscapes, communities, and histories intersect. Through photography installed at monumental scale, the artist transforms everyday environments into spaces of visibility and dialogue.
JR’s practice begins with portraiture and personal encounters. Individuals from different walks of life participate in projects that extend beyond the gallery into public space. Enlarged photographs appear on building façades, streets, and infrastructure, allowing the faces of residents to become part of the architecture itself. In the series
The Wrinkles of the City, portraits of older inhabitants spread across neighborhoods of Los Angeles, their expressions stretching across rooftops and walls. These images reveal the accumulated experiences of the city through its people, suggesting that urban identity emerges from lived memory rather than monumental landmarks.
Several works in the exhibition also revisit JR’s interventions near the border between the United States and Mexico. One of the most widely known images from this project depicts a young child named Kikito gazing playfully over the towering barrier near Tecate. Installed at enormous scale, the portrait introduces a disarming sense of innocence into a heavily politicized landscape. The installation becomes a temporary gathering point as communities from both sides of the border share a meal along the wall, transforming a site of division into a place of encounter.
The exhibition further includes documentation from the artist’s collaborative work inside the California Correctional Institution in Tehachapi. There, JR works with incarcerated participants to create collective images installed directly within the prison yard. Portraits, narratives, and visual illusions combine to reshape the architecture of confinement, if only briefly. Across these projects, the horizon operates as a metaphor for perspective itself—an invitation to reconsider distance, proximity, and the relationships that connect people within shared space.
Image:
JR, Migrants, Mayra, Picnic across the border, General View, Tecate, Mexico - U.S.A., 2017. Colour photograph, matte plexiglass, aluminium, wood (framed behind glass). 40 3/4 x 59 5/8 in. ©JR.
Courtesy of the artist and Perrotin.