Michael Kenna: Confessionali, presented at Joseph Bellows Gallery from April 25 to May 30, 2026, gathers a quietly powerful body of work shaped over nearly a decade in the Italian city of Reggio Emilia. Curated by Lile Kvantaliani, the exhibition centers on a subject both humble and profound: the confessional. Within these enclosed wooden structures, the artist finds a visual language capable of addressing memory, secrecy, and the unseen dimensions of human experience.
Kenna’s engagement with confessionals begins in 2007 inside the Chiesa di Santo Stefano, where the architectural rhythm and symbolic weight of these spaces first capture his attention. Over repeated visits through 2016, he develops a sustained meditation on their forms. Each photograph isolates subtle variations in design, light, and texture, transforming a familiar ecclesiastical object into something meditative and enigmatic. The series aligns with a long photographic tradition of typologies, yet avoids rigidity by allowing atmosphere and emotion to guide the work.
Working exclusively in gelatin silver prints,
Michael Kenna continues to favor traditional processes that emphasize craft and patience. His long exposures—often made in low light—render surfaces with a softness that borders on the dreamlike. Shadows deepen, edges dissolve, and details emerge gradually, echoing the slow unfolding of thought itself. These images do not describe confessionals as functional spaces; instead, they evoke them as vessels of unspoken narratives, holding traces of countless private encounters.
Throughout his career, Kenna builds a reputation for photographing landscapes and structures at moments when light feels most elusive—before dawn or deep into the night. In
Confessionali, that sensibility turns inward. The focus shifts from open horizons to enclosed interiors, yet the same search persists: a desire to reveal what lies beneath the visible surface. The resulting photographs suggest that even the most ordinary forms can contain a quiet intensity, where absence speaks as clearly as presence.
By reducing his subject to its essential variations, Kenna invites sustained looking. The exhibition unfolds slowly, rewarding attention and contemplation, and affirms photography’s enduring capacity to approach what cannot be easily named.
Image:
Confessional, Study 49, Chiesa di Santa Maria Assunta, Minozzo, Reggio Emilia, Italy, 2015 © Michael Kenna. Courtesy of the Joseph Bellows Gallery