Double Take: Photographs in Pairs proposes a quiet form of comparison: place two images side by side and watch meaning shift. The exhibition at Fahey/Klein Gallery assembles over twenty pairings where composition, posture, and pictorial rhythm echo across decades and continents, reminding viewers that form travels faster than biography. When photographs meet in this way, each picture becomes a mirror and a question—what repeats, what diverges, and why does the same arrangement carry different stories?
Curating by formal kinship rather than chronology or genre exposes unexpected dialogues. A parked convertible in 1932 and another in 1993 align through geometry, yet one carries Depression-era restraint while the other radiates consumer youth culture; a reclining figure in a wartime frame and a similar pose in a downtown Manhattan scene share posture, but the political pressure behind the first and the intimate liberty within the second create a dissonance that demands attention. These juxtapositions transform recognition into inquiry: likeness becomes a lens for cultural contrast.
The show’s pairings treat composition as argument. Line, negative space, and the placement of bodies operate like clauses in a sentence, and when two sentences sit together new meanings emerge. Some pairs reveal how photographic forms recur across fashion, reportage, and art photography; others foreground technical affinities—lighting, vantage point, or timing—that bind images made for different ends. In every case, the conversation between pictures highlights photography’s capacity to encode both social facts and aesthetic decisions.
By refusing simple taxonomy,
Double Take privileges the viewer’s act of comparison. The gallery becomes a field for visual thought where pattern recognition meets historical reading, and where the familiar prompts fresh interpretation. Seen in pairs, photographs retain their singular presence while gaining the power to question how images circulate, repeat, and accrue meaning across time. In that doubled view, the past and present converse, and the photograph proves again to be as much a device for thinking as for seeing.
Double Take features over 20 pairings of photographs by
Diane Arbus, Ruven Afanador,
Miles Aldridge,
Manuel Álvarez Bravo,
Peter Beard,
Janette Beckman, Tom Bianchi,
Julie Blackmon, Harry Bowers,
Harry Callahan, Patrick Demarchelier,
John Dominis,
Arthur Elgort,
Walker Evans,
Robert Frank,
Flor Garduño, Lauren Greenfield, Erik Madigan Heck, John Hamilton,
Helmut Newton,
André Kertész,
Peter Lindbergh,
Herbert List,
Mary Ellen Mark, Duane Michals,
Sheila Metzner, Frank Ockenfels 3,
Irving Penn,
Herb Ritts,
Paolo Roversi, Sandford Roth,
Mark Seliger, Harry Shunk,
Melvin Sokolsky,
Alex Stoddard, Sam Taylor-Johnson, Todd Weaver,
Bruce Weber, Nik Wheeler,
Dan Winters,
Albert Watson, and
Bastiaan Woudt.
Image:
Mijanou and friends from Beverly Hills High School on Senior Beach Day, Will Rogers State Beach, 1993 © Lauren Greenfield, courtesy of Fahey/Klein Gallery, Los Angeles