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Saturday, November 22, 2025 |
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| Fahey/Klein Gallery presents 'Tableaux,' Julia Fullerton-Batten's cinematic new exhibition |
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Julia Fullerton-Batten, The Princess Alice Disaster of 1978. Archival Pigment Print. Signed, titled, dated, numbered on label verso.
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LOS ANGELES, CA.- Fahey/Klein Gallery is presenting Julia Fullerton-Batten: Tableaux, a solo exhibition featuring photographs from two major series, Old Father Thames and Frida A Singular Vision of Beauty and Pain. Known internationally for her elaborately staged, cinematic tableaux, Fullerton-Batten constructs meticulously lit scenes that hover between history and imagination. Drawing on the visual language of film and painting, her photographs meditate on moments of time and place, rendered in a theatrical visual narrative.
In Old Father Thames, Fullerton-Batten turns her lens toward the legendary river that has shaped Londons character and prosperity for over two millennia. I live very close to the banks of the Thames in West London and became interested in the historical stories connecting the river to London. Its constantly changing face, moving with the tide and the seasons and the activities that surround the river are an inspiration. But it is the history of the Thames and its stories that draw me in. These stories, countless whimsical, idiosyncratic and tragic happenings, all make up a history of one of the most important rivers in the world, she writes. It has acted as a source of water and food, an artery of communication, and a psychological boundary. From baptisms and Frost Fairs to tales of death, suicide, and scavenging children, Fullerton-Batten re-creates the rivers many interesting individual stories with her signature blend of historical research and cinematic imagination. Shot as though witnessed firsthand, each image reconstructs an episode from the rivers past, transforming history into a vivid tapestry of costume, light, and gesture.
Since Frida Kahlos death in 1954, she has become an enduring symbol of creative resilience. For Fullerton-Batten, Kahlos legacy, her fearless self-expression and profound love of Mexico, became the catalyst for a body of work honoring the artists spirit and homeland. Her legacy as an artist reminds us to embrace our own uniqueness, confront our challenges head-on, and find beauty in the most unexpected places. Fullerton-Batten explains. Her paintings stand as a testament to the enduring power of art to heal, inspire, and ignite change. Through her paintings, Kahlo offers us a unique perspective on Mexican culture, identity, and the human condition, leaving an indelible mark on both national and global art history.
Following her 2022 retrospective in Mexico City, Fullerton-Batten fell in love with the colours, the people, and the rhythm of life. Working with a local film costume designer, she sourced authentic hand-crafted Tehuana dresses from Oaxaca, the same garments Kahlo wore to express her national and cultural pride. Photographed across extraordinary locations including an abandoned mansion in the heart of Mexico City, a Luis Barragán residence, centuries-old haciendas, and the mystic doll island of Xochimilco. These images fuse homage and invention, transforming Kahlos cultural identity into a lush, contemporary dreamscape.
Julia Fullerton-Batten (b. 1970, Bremen, Germany) grew up in Germany and the United States before settling in the UK, where she studied photography and assisted professional photographers for five years. By 2005, she had established herself as a leading voice in fine-art photography. Her work is in the permanent collections of the National Portrait Gallery (London), Musée de lElysée (Lausanne), and the Parliamentary Art Collection (Houses of Parliament), among others.
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Today's News
November 22, 2025
Sotheby's shatters records with $304.6M evening led by Van Gogh and Frida Kahlo
Rare juvenile Triceratops skull, over 70% intact, goes to auction at Gros & Delettrez
Spreading Growth: Mapping the Slow Mutations of Trauma Across Body, Technology, and Time
Van Gogh Museum acquires two remarkable pastels
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts debuts major Inuit art presentation in newly renovated galleries
'Superman' No. 1 leaps to $9.12 million at Heritage, becomes most expensive comic ever sold
Fahey/Klein Gallery presents 'Tableaux,' Julia Fullerton-Batten's cinematic new exhibition
Todd Hido merges fiction and memory in atmospheric new exhibition at Reflex Amsterdam
Stacey Masson appointed Director of Marketing and Communications at The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
Münchner Stadtmuseum opens exhibition revisiting Herbert List's postwar photographs of Munich
Charles Bell's Gum Ball I sets artist auction record in Heritage's $4.73 million Modern & Contemporary Art sale
Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen announces its 2026 program
AstaGuru presents rare and celebrated works of modern Indian artists at their upcoming auction
Tamiko Kawata unveils monumental safety-pin installation at Alison Bradley Projects
Maggi Hambling and Sarah Lucas reunite for dual exhibition
Cheryl Molnar explores nature, memory, and human impact in 'The Overview' at C24 Gallery
'Wonderscape' brings together Julien Calot's radiant paintings and Austyn Taylor's tender sculptures
Bienvenu Steinberg & C opens exhibition featuring Koo Bohnchang, Jane Yang D'Haene, and Peter Kim
Four UK artist-makers probe landscape, material, and memory
MCA Australia opens its major summer exhibition Data Dreams: Art and AI
Power Station of Art presents 15th Shanghai Biennale: Does the flower hear the bee?
The Huntington acquires rare Civil War painting
New exhibition at Kunstmuseum Ravensburg pairs Kathrin Sonntag with Gabriele Münter's early photographs
Peter Blum Gallery presents Su-Mei Tse's meditative exhibition 'This is (not) a love song'
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