At Von Lintel Gallery,
Kate Petley: Penumbra examines the unstable boundary between image and object through a body of work that resists easy categorization. Spanning photography, painting and sculpture, Petley’s practice unfolds through a carefully staged process in which light functions as both subject and structural element. The exhibition marks her third presentation with the gallery, reinforcing a trajectory that has steadily refined her hybrid visual language.
Petley begins with ephemeral constructions assembled in the studio: fragments of painted material arranged under controlled, high-intensity lighting. These configurations exist only briefly, designed to be photographed at a precise moment when shadows, reflections and color relationships reach a point of tension. The photograph becomes a record of this fleeting arrangement, yet it is not the final step. Each image is subsequently transferred onto canvas, where Petley intervenes with subtle painted additions that blur the distinction between mechanical reproduction and handmade gesture.
The resulting works occupy an ambiguous perceptual space. At first glance, they appear as photographs; on closer inspection, the surface reveals minute disruptions that destabilize the image. Planes seem to shift, edges dissolve, and depth fluctuates without resolving into a fixed perspective. This oscillation between flatness and illusion aligns Petley’s work with a lineage of artists concerned with perception, while maintaining a distinctly contemporary engagement with photographic processes.
Active since the late 1980s, Petley has developed this approach across decades of exhibitions in the United States and abroad. A recent Pollock-Krasner Foundation award underscores the continued relevance of her practice, which remains rooted in experimentation with materials and visual perception. Based in Peekskill, New York, she continues to explore how images are constructed, not only through the camera, but through the interplay of light, surface and time. In
Penumbra, these concerns converge in works that hover between presence and illusion, inviting sustained and attentive looking.
Image:
Float and Dive, 2025. Archival Print and Acrylic on Canvas © Kate Petley