At Higher Pictures,
Sheila Pinkel: Early Works, 1974–1977 brings to light a formative chapter in the artist’s career, presenting a group of cyanotypes that have remained largely unseen until now. On view from April 22 to June 13, 2026, the exhibition gathers twelve works that trace the origins of Pinkel’s sustained investigation into light, material, and transformation. These early experiments reveal a practice already attuned to the intersection of scientific process and artistic intuition.
Central to the exhibition are the Body Cyanotypes, in which Pinkel uses sunlight as both medium and collaborator. Exposed at midday to achieve heightened contrast, the works transform the human figure into something fluid and unstable. Bodies appear suspended, fragmented, and multiplied, as if reshaped by the movement of light itself. The resulting images echo surrealist traditions, yet remain grounded in the physical act of exposure, where time, gesture, and environment leave their imprint on the photographic surface.
Pinkel expands this approach through increasingly complex techniques, layering objects, photographic negatives, and textures directly onto treated paper. Using tools such as carbon-arc lamps and vacuum frames, she manipulates light with precision, while also introducing a tactile dimension by pressing materials into the paper before exposure. These interventions leave subtle traces that persist even after development, giving the works an almost archaeological quality. The surface becomes a record not only of what is seen, but of what has passed through it.
Among the most striking aspects of the exhibition is Pinkel’s early engagement with computer-generated imagery, an unusual move at the time. Integrating digital forms into her cyanotypes, she creates a dialogue between emerging technologies and traditional photographic processes. The recurring presence of Marilyn Monroe, rendered as a ghostly and fragmented figure, underscores this interplay between cultural memory and technological transformation. Together, these works position Pinkel’s early practice as both experimental and prescient, anticipating ongoing conversations around the boundaries of image-making.
Now recognized in major collections including the Museum of Modern Art and the Centre Pompidou, Sheila Pinkel emerges here as an artist already pushing against the limits of her medium. This exhibition offers a focused yet expansive view of a body of work that continues to resonate across both analog and digital contexts.
Image:
© Sheila Pinkel, courtesy of Higher Pictures