Between Panic and Paradise, on view at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art from August 23, 2026 to January 3, 2027, brings together more than five decades of work by Eileen Cowin, offering a layered exploration of narrative, memory, and perception. Working across photography, video, and mixed media, Cowin constructs images that resist fixed meaning, instead unfolding as open-ended sequences where emotion and ambiguity coexist. Her practice reflects a sustained engagement with storytelling, drawing as much from cinema and literature as from lived experience.
Throughout the exhibition, Cowin navigates the fragile boundary between fiction and reality. Carefully staged scenes, recurring characters, and suggestive gestures create a visual language that feels both intimate and theatrical. Domestic spaces, relationships, and fleeting encounters become sites of tension, where familiarity gives way to unease. Rather than offering resolution, her images invite viewers to inhabit uncertainty, piecing together fragments of narrative that remain deliberately incomplete.
The works on view highlight Cowin’s experimental approach to photographic processes. From early Polaroids to large-scale inkjet prints and video installations, she embraces the material possibilities of the medium as part of her storytelling. Sequences of images function almost like film stills, suggesting motion and continuity while remaining suspended in time. This interplay between stillness and progression reinforces the psychological depth of her work, where each frame carries both presence and absence.
Emerging from the vibrant Los Angeles art scene of the 1970s, Cowin develops a practice aligned with artists who question the authority of images and the narratives they construct. Her work reflects a broader cultural moment shaped by media saturation, yet it remains deeply personal, rooted in the complexities of human relationships and memory. Over time, her images continue to evolve, maintaining a dialogue between past and present.
Between Panic and Paradise offers a space where stories hover between clarity and mystery, encouraging a mode of looking that embraces contradiction and leaves meaning deliberately unresolved.
Image:
Eileen Cowin, The Uninvited Visitor, 2025, courtesy of the artist, © Eileen Cowin