l101 S. Locust, Ste. B-07
Stuart Allen: Seeing Color, on view at PDNB Gallery from March 28 to May 30, 2026, brings together recent and earlier works that trace the artist’s sustained investigation into the structure and perception of color. Blending photography, digital processes, and painterly approaches, Allen constructs images that move between scientific inquiry and visual delight, revealing how color operates beyond immediate perception.
Central to the exhibition is the series
Flights, where photographs taken from airplane windows transform into intricate fields of color. Captured at high altitude, these images register subtle atmospheric shifts that often escape the naked eye. Through algorithmic manipulation, Allen translates these fleeting views into grids of colored dots, reminiscent of halftone printing yet retaining the integrity of each hue. The resulting compositions function as both documents of travel and studies of light in motion, anchored by precise references to time and location.
In contrast, the series
Every Unique Color turns inward, focusing on the chromatic complexity hidden within everyday subjects. By extracting and reorganizing every color found in a single image—often derived from food—Allen creates ordered matrices that map hue and luminosity with methodical clarity. These works reveal unexpected harmonies and tensions, transforming familiar objects into abstract systems governed by visual logic.
The exhibition also revisits earlier explorations, including Allen’s pixel-based works and his studies of soap bubbles, where shifting wavelengths produce iridescent surfaces under controlled light. Across these varied series, a consistent thread emerges: a fascination with how technology and observation can uncover dimensions of color that lie just beyond ordinary vision.
Seeing Color reflects an approach grounded in experimentation and curiosity, where the boundaries between art and science dissolve. Allen’s images invite close looking, encouraging viewers to consider not only what color is, but how it is experienced, measured, and ultimately reimagined.
Image:
Stuart Allen, Bubble No. 12, 2014 © Stuart Allen