A new presentation of
Mona Kuhn’s
Kings Road series arrives in San Francisco with
A Love Affair, on view at EUQINOM Gallery from May 28 to June 27, 2026. The exhibition focuses on photographs made at the Schindler House in Los Angeles, a landmark of modernist architecture designed by Rudolph M. Schindler in the 1920s. Known for its open-plan design and integration with the surrounding environment, the house serves as both subject and setting for Kuhn’s recent work.
The series combines color photographs with solarized black-and-white prints, a technique that reverses tones and alters contrast. This process gives the images a distinct visual quality, where light and shadow appear intensified and slightly disorienting. Rather than documenting the space in a straightforward way, Kuhn uses these effects to shift attention toward atmosphere and perception. The house becomes less a fixed structure and more a changing environment shaped by light, texture and movement.
An important starting point for the project is a letter written by Schindler to an unnamed recipient, discovered by Kuhn during her research. This detail informs the presence of a recurring female figure who appears throughout the series. Moving through interiors and outdoor spaces, she is often partially obscured or blurred, adding a narrative element without fully defining it. Her presence connects the photographs while leaving room for interpretation.
Kuhn, born in São Paulo and based in Los Angeles, has long worked with themes related to the body, space and natural light. In this series, those elements extend into a more architectural context. The Schindler House, with its historical and cultural associations, provides a framework for exploring how personal stories can be linked to specific places.
The exhibition follows earlier presentations in Europe and Asia and includes works recently acquired by the J. Paul Getty Museum. In
A Love Affair, Kuhn presents a series that moves between documentation and interpretation, using photographic techniques to reconsider how space and memory are visually experienced.
Image:
© Mona Kuhn, courtesy of EUQINOM Gallery