Carrie Schneider: FLW, on view from May 16 to July 11, 2026 at David Peter Francis, centers on one of Schneider’s most ambitious works and her first solo presentation with the gallery. The exhibition brings photography, film and installation into close contact, using a single sequence from Chris Marker’s 1962 film
La Jetée as its starting point.
Schneider, whose practice has long drawn from feminist image-making and the material limits of chromogenic paper, turns to the brief awakening of Hélène Châtelain in Marker’s film, the only moving image in a work otherwise built from still frames. That moment becomes the basis for
First Living Woman, a one-kilometer photographic work that expands the scene across three steel tiers at the Venice Biennale and then returns to motion in the gallery through a Super 16mm projection.
The exhibition shows how closely Schneider works with repetition, scale and translation. Beginning from a pirated clip viewed on her phone, she rephotographed each frame onto the large photographic scroll through a room-sized camera built in her studio in Hudson, New York. The result is not a simple reproduction of a film still, but a layered reworking of it, with each shift in format changing the way the image is read.
That process fits Schneider’s larger career. Born in Chicago in 1979 and now based between Brooklyn and Hudson, she has shown widely, with solo exhibitions at MASS MoCA, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and the Finnish Museum of Photography. Her work is held in major collections including the Art Institute of Chicago and the Minneapolis Institute of Art, and she received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2024.
At David Peter Francis,
FLW connects the gallery presentation to Schneider’s parallel appearance at the Venice Biennale and at Independent Art Fair. Seen together, those projects underline her interest in how a face, a frame and a strip of film can still carry narrative weight, even when stretched, reworked and shifted across format.
Image:
© Simon Silva, courtesy of the Houston Center for Photography.