At Lehmann Maupin in New York,
Alex Prager: Matinee presents a concise yet tightly constructed group of new photographs that return to Los Angeles as both setting and psychological terrain. Comprising four large-scale works, the exhibition distills Prager’s long-standing interest in the mechanics of image-making, where staged scenes operate less as narratives than as fragments of unstable memory. The city appears not as a fixed geography, but as a shifting construct shaped by cinema, literature and collective projection.
Born and based in Los Angeles,
Alex Prager has built a practice that draws heavily from film language while remaining firmly rooted in photography. Her images are meticulously staged, with actors, sets and lighting arranged in precise detail and captured entirely in-camera. This insistence on physical construction lends her work a peculiar tension: the scenes feel hyperreal, yet also estranged, as if suspended between recognition and artifice. Over the past two decades, this approach has defined a body of work that explores crowd behavior, solitude and the emotional undercurrents of public life.
In
Matinee, Los Angeles emerges through a series of charged tableaux. In
Bonnie Hill (Overlook), a solitary figure occupies a familiar vantage point above the քաղաքի sprawl, evoking both cinematic anticipation and unease. The overlook, a recurring motif in representations of the city, becomes a site where narrative seems poised but unresolved. Elsewhere,
Ceremony turns to the rituals of appearance embedded in Hollywood culture, presenting a carefully orchestrated scene in which costume, color and gesture converge into a composition that recalls historical painting while remaining distinctly contemporary.
Prager’s recent turn toward filmmaking, marked by the release of her feature
Dreamquil, informs the exhibition’s sensibility. The photographs operate like stills from an imagined film, compressing time and suggesting stories that remain deliberately incomplete. Across these works, oppositions—between reality and performance, glamour and disquiet—do not resolve but coexist, reflecting a city and an image culture defined by constant reinvention.
Image:
Bonnie Hill (Overlook), 2026 - Courtesy Alex Prager Studio © Alex Prager