NEW YORK, NY.- Pace and
Pace/MacGill are presenting an exhibition of recent photographs by Richard Learoyd, on view on the second and ninth floors of 32 East 57th Street. Marking the British artists second solo show with the galleries, Richard Learoyd: Curious features never-before-seen large-scale gelatin silver prints, as well as unique color images made with a camera obscura. Comprising landscapes, portraits and still lifes, among other subjects, Learoyds latest work advances his continued exploration of the technical possibilities of the medium and the limits of photographic expression.
In the second floor gallery, Pace debuts Learoyds seven-part sequence of a rearing white horse, alongside photographs of crashed and burned automobiles. Made from 8 x 10 and 20 x 24 negatives, enlarged to 88 x 68 and 64 x 95 in a custom-built 20 x 24 enlarger, and printed on hand-coated, sensitized watercolor paper, these works are most likely the largest single-sheet gelatin silver prints ever produced. While reminiscent of Edward Muybridges animal locomotion studies, Learoyds series chronicles the history of two-dimensional equine representation, from crouching Greco-Roman depictions to Victorian period and present-day portrayals of the horse majestically rearing. The white horse is also significant to Learoyd due to its British symbolism, appearing in prehistoric geoglyphs carved into the chalky hillsides of England.
Considering his pictures of crashed and burned vehicles, Learoyd states: The idea is that the world is shaped by catastrophic events. Maybe that could be extrapolated to peoples lives, maybe our lives are shaped by small catastrophes. It goes back to that idea that we are all patiently waiting for the end of the world, sometimes, not literally. These universal conundrums of life and death, beauty and decay, also inform his one-of-a-kind color portraits and flower studies, a selection of which will occupy a small adjacent room in the second floor gallery. Made in his London studio with a roomsized camera that exposes photographic paper directly to light, Learoyds images of contemplative sitters and withering blooms become visual meditations on the human condition.
On the ninth floor, Pace/MacGill dedicates its presentation to six large-scale landscapes photographed in Yosemite and Big Sur in the summer of 2018. Made with a tent-like, portable 8-foot-square camera obscura of Learoyds own design, the featured black-and-white contact prints measure 48 x 77 and render the grandeur of Californias valleys and coastline with unprecedented detail. Working in the rich photographic landscape tradition of Carleton Watkins, Ansel Adams and Edward Weston, among others, Learoyd set out to visually translate these well-known views of the American West through his unconventional antiquarian practice. As he explains, I was looking for an interpretation of this place through a process. . . I was driven to those large views because I thought they were actually the most relevant. I figured all I could do was match myself and my process against some of the things that went before and see whether something new could come from my interpretation of the subject.
It is Learoyds unparalleled passion for the medium and its materials, coupled with his incessant curiosity, that drive him to constantly broaden and refine his photographic approach. As Learoyds ambitious field of vision expands technically and thematically, inside the studio and out his images continue to challenge the barrier of illusion and absorb viewers in the experience of looking.
Richard Learoyd studied photography under the landscape artist Thomas Joshua Cooper at the Glasgow School of Art, Scotland. His photographs were the subject of the solo exhibitions Richard Learoyd: Dark Mirror at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London (2015-16), and Richard Learoyd: In the Studio at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (2016) and The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO (2017). In June of this year, Fundación MAPFRE in Barcelona will present a traveling survey of Learoyds work, curated by Sandra S. Phillips and accompanied by a catalogue.
His photographs are held in the permanent collections of institutions worldwide, including Centre Pompidou, Paris; J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Tate, London; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; and Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven; among others. In 2015, Aperture, in association with Pier 24 Photography, published Richard Learoyd: Day for Night, a comprehensive monograph of the artists color portraits and studio work.
Learoyd lives and works in London, England.