Autofictions, on view from April 18 to May 22, 2026 at Candice Madey in New York, brings together five artists whose practices challenge the boundaries between lived experience and constructed narrative. Featuring works by Darrel Ellis, Libuše Jarcovjáková, Abby Robinson, Gail Thacker, and Ann Weathersby, the exhibition explores photography as a space where identity is continuously shaped, performed, and reimagined.
The title draws from a literary tradition in which autobiography merges with fiction, suggesting that personal truth is often inseparable from invention. In this context, the artists approach photography not as a straightforward document but as a flexible medium capable of holding contradiction. Across the exhibition, diaristic impulses intersect with staged imagery, resulting in works that feel at once intimate and deliberately constructed. The influence of earlier figures in both literature and photography resonates throughout, reinforcing a lineage of self-reflective storytelling that remains highly relevant.
Darrel Ellis’s contribution stands out for its theatrical intensity. Known for manipulating archival imagery, he presents here a rare series of staged photographs in which close collaborators reenact allegorical scenes. These images merge personal history with art historical references, producing layered compositions that oscillate between vulnerability and performance. In contrast, Abby Robinson’s long-running
AutoWorks unfolds through repetition and sequence, using small-scale self-portraits to suggest an ever-shifting identity shaped over time.
Gail Thacker’s work revisits the experimental spirit of New York’s downtown scene, pushing the material limits of Polaroid photography. Her images combine mythological references with contemporary portraiture, creating figures that feel both archetypal and immediate. Meanwhile, Libuše Jarcovjáková’s photographs from Prague’s underground queer community offer a raw, immersive account of life under political constraint, where acts of self-expression become gestures of resistance.
Ann Weathersby’s sculptural works introduce a different dimension, transforming found photographs into layered objects that question authorship and memory. By embedding anonymous images within glass, she creates a distance that is both aesthetic and conceptual, inviting reflection on the lives these fragments once represented. Together, the works in
Autofictions suggest that photography’s relationship to truth remains fluid, shaped as much by imagination as by experience.
Image:
Libuše Jarcovjáková, Untitled (from the T-Club series), ca. 1981-85 © Libuše Jarcovjáková