Poetic Exposures gathers work that treats light as both medium and message, showing how photographers across time draw with brightness, shadow, and motion to make meaning. On view at the Van Winkle Law Firm Gallery, the selection moves from early experiments to contemporary interventions, linking Muybridge’s studies of motion to Jo Sandman’s X-rays and photograms, and asking how each technique rewrites what a photograph can be. The thread that binds these works is curiosity: artists testing the edges of process to translate fleeting phenomena into lasting form.
Many pieces in the exhibition dramatize time as a malleable material. Muybridge’s sequential frames turn gesture into graphic notation, measuring movement in ways that alter perception itself; later practices compress or stretch temporal experience through long exposures, multiple exposures, or mechanical scanning. Others work at the microscopic or the invisible—X-rays reveal interior structures, photograms register objects by their absence—each method expanding the vocabulary of what light can disclose. Together they suggest that photography never merely reproduces the world but reconfigures it.\n
Technical invention sits beside intuitive risk-taking in these works. Some artists manipulate chemistry and emulsion to coax unexpected colors and textures; others exploit digital algorithms and sensor idiosyncrasies to produce shimmering artifacts and ghostly interruptions. In every case, process becomes content: the method of making feeds the meaning of the image, and the viewer reads both simultaneously. The show privileges works that make that relationship visible, where technique is not hidden but offered as part of the poem.
At its heart,
Poetic Exposures celebrates photography as a continuing experiment in seeing. It invites slow looking and delight in method, asking viewers to notice not only what is pictured, but how light was shaped to render it—frame by frame, grain by grain, exposure by exposure. The exhibition affirms that even as tools evolve, the essential task remains unchanged: to let light tell its stories.
Image:
Jo Sandman, Untitled from "Light Memory" series, 2006, sepia-toned gelatin silver print on paper, 19 ⅞ × 15 ⅞ inches. Black Mountain College Collection, gift of the Artist, Asheville Art Museum