Split Second places sport at the center of a photography exhibition shaped by Houston’s World Cup moment. On view from June 18 to July 12, 2026 in HCP’s HOU Gallery, the show brings together work by Texas-based and national artists who treat athletics not only as competition, but as a public language of ritual, identity and spectacle.
The exhibition opens with images and installations that move across cheerleading, wrestling, football, lucha libre, basketball and soccer. Eli Durst looks at the collective energy of group performance and the strain behind it, while Geoff Winningham returns to the Texas football culture he documented for years in his celebrated
Rites of Fall project. Jorge Pineda presents lucha libre as both sport and social theater, with a focus on movement, audience and cultural memory.
Patty Carroll approaches soccer from a different angle, using a staged domestic scene to connect athletic culture with femininity, consumer objects and humor. Tay Butler’s collage-based work brings basketball into dialogue with classical sculpture, turning athletic imagery into a critique of hero worship, Black masculinity and the way sports figures become symbols far beyond the court.
Together, the artists present sport as more than a game. The photographs shift between observation and performance, documentary and construction, and they capture the split-second moments that shape momentum, emotion and public attention. In that sense, the exhibition fits Houston’s World Cup season while also speaking to a wider culture in which sports images circulate as part of everyday life.
Split Second also underscores HCP’s role in showing work by Houston-area and Texas photographers in a space devoted to the region’s visual culture. The opening reception, set for June 18 from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM CST, places the exhibition in direct conversation with the city’s sports atmosphere, where the noise around the tournament and the quieter questions behind it share the same frame.
Image:
Kick It, 2024 © Patty Carroll