Vesna Pavlović: No Ordinary Sunsets, presented from March 14 through April 18, 2026 at Whitespace Gallery, brings together three recent bodies of work by Serbian-born artist Vesna Pavlović. Known for her thoughtful engagement with archives, architecture, and political memory, Pavlović continues her long-standing exploration of how photography can interpret the layered histories of places shaped by ideological conflict and cultural exchange. Through carefully constructed images and conceptual strategies, the exhibition reflects on the ways historical narratives remain embedded in landscapes, buildings, and visual records.
One of the central projects in the exhibition,
Non-Aligned Visualities, grows out of a collaborative research initiative examining architectural networks that connected countries within the Cold War–era Non-Aligned Movement. Pavlović focuses on the IMS Žeželj prefabricated construction system, a building method developed in former Yugoslavia during the 1970s and later used in projects across nations such as Cuba and Angola. Her photographs isolate structural details and fragments of these constructions, transforming them into quiet meditations on shared architectural language and the global circulation of political ideals during the Cold War period.
Another series,
Sometimes I can hear the ocean in my ears, shifts attention to the coastal landscape of Jibacoa in Cuba. Once the site of a sugar plantation owned by American industrialist Milton S. Hershey, the area carries traces of complex economic and colonial histories. Pavlović photographs the lush surroundings with a contemplative sensibility, focusing on textures, foliage, and shifting light. The images suggest how natural environments quietly absorb the remnants of political and industrial pasts.
The exhibition concludes with
Searching for a perfect sunset, an experimental project created during an artist residency in Joshua Tree National Park. A grid of color photographs records the artist’s playful attempt to frame an ideal sunset while holding vintage 35mm slides in front of the landscape. The resulting compositions blur the boundary between past and present imagery, emphasizing photography’s role as both a document and a constructed experience. Across the exhibition, Pavlović approaches photography as a flexible medium capable of expanding beyond the frame, inviting viewers to reconsider how images carry memory, ideology, and the passage of time.
Image:
© Vesna Pavlović