Marie Tomanova: Three Empty Weeks in July opens at Harkawik on June 12 and runs through July 11, 2026, marking the gallery’s first exhibition with the Czech-born, New York-based artist. The series grew out of a project Tomanova began on January 1, 2022, and it settles into a body of work that is both intimate and carefully built, using self-portraiture to test the limits of documentary language.
The photographs show Tomanova repeatedly turning the camera on herself, often in crouched or folded poses that make the body look guarded, hidden or interrupted. The images are set against landscapes, buildings and fragments of interior space, but the settings rarely read as straightforward backdrops. Instead, they blur into the figure through double exposure and layered instant film, making it hard to separate person from place. Shot with a Fujifilm Instax Square SQ6, the pictures use the small format’s imperfections and overlaps as part of their structure.
Fruit, flowers and foliage appear often, sometimes covering the body and sometimes adding a blunt, almost theatrical charge to the frame. Those elements give the work a visual echo of older ideas about purity, beauty and femininity, while also pushing against them. The resulting pictures are not polished confessions. They are posed, repeated and self-aware, built as a daily practice rather than a single statement.
Tomanova’s work sits close to the history of artists such as
Francesca Woodman,
Nan Goldin, Melissa Shook, Friedl Kubelka and Yurie Nagashima, but it keeps its own sharp edge. What matters here is not only the image itself, but the uneasy feeling it creates: closeness mixed with distance, exposure mixed with concealment. That tension gives
Three Empty Weeks in July its force, making the series less a record of facts than a study in how the self is staged, repeated and revised.
Image:
January 3, 2022. Unique Fujifilm Instax Square print © Marie Tomanova