GSTAAD.- Gagosian presenta an exhibition of photographs by Irving Penn in Gstaad, on view from February 14 to April 6, 2026. This marks the gallerys debut presentation of his work and its first collaboration with the Irving Penn Foundation.
Irving Penn (19172009) stands among the most influential image-makers of the twentieth century, producing photographs that shaped modern fashion, portraiture, and the still life while blurring the boundaries between commercial practice and fine art. Surveying Penns work across seven decades, the exhibition showcases a wide range of photographic processes and includes many images originally published in Vogue that have rarely been seen outside the magazines pages.
Photographs taken in New York and Paris in 1949 and 1950 exemplify Penns singular contribution to the look of postwar fashion, aligning his restrained, architectural compositions with the new silhouettes introduced by designers such as Balenciaga, Chanel, and Molyneux. Working against spare studio backdrops and employing dramatic directional light, Penn distilled fashion into form, emphasizing silhouette, contrast, and texture with remarkable precision. His portraitsrepresented here by images of Marlene Dietrich (1948) and Grace Kelly (1954)reveal his ability to convey presence and individuality through subtle adjustments of pose and framing.
Penns commitment to photography extended beyond image making to an exacting engagement with the printed object itself. The exhibition includes three versions of Seine Rowboat, France (1951), a photograph of an isolated figure rowing on the Seine that Penn selected for the cover of his first monograph, Moments Preserved (1960). Executed in dye transfer, gum bichromate, and platinum-palladium, each handcrafted print has a distinct tonal and material character, underscoring Penns belief in the photograph as a finely made, enduring object.
Taken more than three decades apart, Man Lighting Girls Cigarette (Jean Patchett), New York (1949) and Vogue Bathing Suit with Light Meter, New York (1982) reflect Penns visual wit. In the former, a centrally placed bottle refracts light like a lens, subtly distorting Patchetts features; in the latter, Penn knowingly exposes the mechanics of image making by including an assistants hand holding a light meter. Editorial photographs such as Woman Stepping on Mans Toe (1980), Bee on Lips (1995), Headache (Audrey Marnay), New York (1999), and Young Woman Hearing Noise, New York (2003) further demonstrate his ability to transform concepts into images of lasting visual impact.
Penn was also an innovator of the photographic still life. His flower photographs depart from convention through compressed compositions and unexpected perspectives that heighten color and form, while his close-up images of discarded cigarette butts elevate debris into subjects of quiet monumentality. Printed in sumptuous platinum-palladium metals, these works challenge notions of beauty and impermanence.