At Robin Rice Gallery,
José Picayo: 35 Years in Photographs offers a wide-ranging survey of an artist whose practice resists easy categorization. On view from April 9 to June 15, 2026, the exhibition marks Picayo’s tenth solo presentation with the gallery, bringing together works produced between 1991 and 2025. The selection traces a career defined by technical rigor and a distinctive sensibility that merges formal elegance with an undercurrent of wit.
Born in Havana in 1959 and shaped by a life that spans Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the United States, José Picayo developed a photographic language grounded in both discipline and experimentation. After settling in New York and studying at Parsons School of Design, he established himself within the editorial world, contributing to publications such as
Harper’s Bazaar,
Esquire, and
The New York Times Magazine. His images, often poised between severity and playfulness, reveal a careful orchestration of composition, light, and gesture.
Picayo’s commitment to analog processes remains central to his work. Rejecting digital manipulation in his personal practice, he relies on film, including large-format cameras and Polaroid formats, to create images that feel both timeless and materially grounded. This approach lends his photographs a tactile presence, reinforcing his belief in photography as a medium capable of transforming reality rather than simply recording it. The resulting works carry a sense of ambiguity, evoking earlier eras while remaining detached from any fixed moment in time.
Beyond photography, Picayo’s recent engagement with textile practices extends his interest in craft and process. His exploration of weaving, taught in various New York institutions, reflects a continuity in his approach to making, where precision and materiality remain essential. At Robin Rice Gallery,
35 Years in Photographs stands as both a retrospective and a reaffirmation of an artist committed to the enduring possibilities of traditional photographic methods.
Image:
DEREK #1, 1995 © José Picayo, courtesy of the Robin Rice Gallery