7457 St. Charles Avenue
Seascapes, on view from April 2 through August 1, 2026 at A Gallery for Fine Photography, presents a new body of work by Richard Sexton that turns toward the shifting horizon where land, water, and atmosphere meet. Known for his long engagement with the landscapes and cultural textures of the American South, Sexton approaches the sea not as a dramatic subject, but as a space of subtle variation and quiet intensity.
The exhibition gathers fifteen photographs produced using a quad tone piezo printing process, a method that allows for a refined tonal range and remarkable depth. In these images, light becomes the primary subject. Skies merge with water in near-seamless gradients, while delicate shifts in tone suggest changing weather, tide, and time of day. The compositions remain spare, often reducing the scene to elemental divisions between sea and sky, yet they carry a strong sense of atmosphere and presence.
Sexton’s work has long balanced documentary precision with a more meditative sensibility, and that duality remains evident here. While his earlier projects frequently examined industrial corridors and urban environments along the Mississippi River, these seascapes move toward a more distilled vision. The absence of human figures does not diminish the sense of human connection; instead, it underscores a broader reflection on place, memory, and the enduring pull of coastal landscapes in the cultural imagination of the region.
Over the course of his career, Sexton has contributed extensively to photographic publishing and exhibition, authoring numerous books and presenting work in institutions across the United States. His images are held in major museum collections, reinforcing his role as a key observer of Southern visual identity. In
Seascapes, that perspective expands outward, engaging a subject that feels both timeless and immediate.
The exhibition offers a measured and contemplative experience, where minimalism and technical precision combine to evoke the vast, often elusive character of the sea.
Image:
Clearing Storm © Richard Sexton