Biography

A central theme of Matthew Pillsbury's photography is investigating the myriad ways we fill both space and time. Using long exposures to create visual narratives of an indeterminate period, Pillsbury offers a way of representing the world that is wholly unique to photography. Concentrating on the relationship between space, time and technology, his work depicts the physical spaces we occupy and pass through, without committing to a single traditional photographic moment. 

 

Often using exposures exceeding one hour, Pillsbury's photographs render buildings and other stationary objects as solid, enduring entities, fixed and stable, whereas objects in motion, including pedestrians and traffic, appear as transparent incorporeal apparitions, in flux and impermanent. Each image thus captures the movement of a sequence of moments, stretched across a singular spatial canvas.

 

In the Screen Lives (2005) series, subjects are shown in the privacy of their homes watching TV, working on their computers, or using other screens. Individuals are depicted as physically present yet mentally absent from their surroundings; they remain spatially isolated while digitally tethered to others. In City Stages (2012), Pillsbury's subjects are removed from the setting of their homes and placed within public spaces around New York that become the stages on which the dramas of individual lives unfold. In 2014, Pillsbury photographed his first body of work in color, Tokyo (2014). The series takes us to the most populous city in the world, where tradition and technology have merged to create a landscape in which robots and LEDs give the city a luminous pulse. 

 

Drawing on inspiration from Hiroshi Sugimoto and Abelardo Morell, Pillsbury's photographs invite viewers to reflect upon how they choose to fill their spaces and time. Demonstrating a talent for making the familiar seem strange, Pillsbury draws attention to the fundamental ingredients of existence, transforming overlooked aspects of reality into both subject and object.

 

Matthew Pillsbury graduated cum laude from Yale University in 1995 and received his MFA from the School of Visual Arts in 2004. In 2007, he was awarded the Fondation HSBC pour la Photographie award in France, and is also a recipient of the 2014 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellowship. In 2013, Pillsbury published his monograph City Stages with Aperture. His work is represented in more than twenty-five permanent collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Guggenheim Museum, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; High Museum of Art, Atlanta; Musée du Louvre, Paris; and many others. Edwynn Houk Gallery has served as exclusive representative of Pillsbury's works since 2019, the year of the gallery's inaugural exhibition Then and Now (2019) highlighting works from early series as well as recent images made in Singapore, Paris, and New York. 

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