5566 W. Washington Blvd
Fast Forward: Analog Photography as a Third Space, on view from April 10 through June 13, 2026, brings renewed attention to the enduring relevance of film-based practices at a moment when image culture feels increasingly saturated and accelerated. Gathering prize-winning works alongside a wide selection of emerging and established photographers, the exhibition frames analog photography not as a nostalgic return, but as a deliberate and timely response to contemporary visual overload.
Curated by
Aline Smithson and Dr. Rotem Rozental, the project examines how photography functions as a social and material space—one shaped as much by process as by image. In contrast to the frictionless production of digital media, the artists presented here embrace slowness, imperfection, and tactility. Grain, chemical traces, and subtle tonal shifts become essential elements rather than flaws, anchoring each photograph in time and physical reality.
The exhibition highlights a range of approaches, from traditional darkroom printing to experimental manipulations of film and light. While the visual languages vary, a shared sensibility emerges: an insistence on presence. These works resist the disposability often associated with contemporary imagery, inviting sustained attention and a closer reading of surface and detail. In this context, repetition, delay, and manual intervention operate as creative tools, shaping both the image and the experience of viewing it.
Beyond the images themselves,
Fast Forward points to the communal dimension of analog practice. Darkrooms, workshops, and shared studio environments foster exchanges that extend beyond the solitary act of picture-making. Photography becomes a site of dialogue, where knowledge circulates through hands-on engagement and collective experimentation. This emphasis on connection underscores the idea of a “third space,” situated between tradition and innovation, solitude and collaboration.
In an era increasingly defined by automation and speed, the exhibition suggests that the future of photography may lie דווקא in its oldest methods. By reasserting the value of process, material, and time, these artists reaffirm photography’s capacity to remain both deeply personal and profoundly human.
Image:
1st Place Winner – Chandler Nelson Hubbard, A Funeral Home for Fish © Chandler Nelson Hubbard, courtesy of LACP