EXHIBITIONS
GHOSTS OF OUR HUMANITIES
Abel Llavall-Ubach
October 1, 2025 to January 3, 2026
The Dreamers is most proud to bring to West Texas the work of French photographer
Abel Llavall-Ubach for his first solo exhibition in the US. Presenting 17 photographs spanning 17 years, « Ghosts Of Our Humanities » is a slow-paced, quiet and somber reverie capturing the gently haunting atmospheres of places found deserted.
The identity and motives of those who left is not the focus here, rather, emphasis is given to what remains. Lonesome statues, still waves and overgrown trees, an empty street graced by the sun. Though at first one might be tempted to catalog the works in this exhibition as simple landscapes, viewers willing to pause and intimately converse with the photographs might start to perceive their more complex nature.
Famed for his subdued portraits that humbly exude both the emotional and the stern, (e.g. Mathias Kiss or Barbara Chase-Riboud for The New York Times Style Magazine), Llavall-Ubach is, after all, a virtuoso at capturing the essence and soul of all things, living and inanimate. Therefore, are these empty streets and forgotten monuments indeed landscapes, or have they become ghosts through our humanity, our love, loss, and sorrows? Could they be the portraits of our now vanished emotions? Together, the photographs constitute a deeply personal form of meditation, blurring spatial and temporal landmarks in a melancholic and contemplative atmosphere – the signature of the artist’s photographic vision.
SUMMER DAYS
June 6, 2025 to August 29, 2025
Extended until September 27, 2025
with
Louise Bourgeois, Ramon Deanda, Jack Pierson, Jana Renée,
Matt Stevens, Yosdy Valdivia, Françoise Watin
IT WAS THE DESERT WHO CAUGHT ME
February 21, 2025 to May 24, 2025
with
Lala Abaddon, Ramon Deanda, Tony Drewry, Thalia Mavros, Jana Renée, Matt Stevens, Carlie Tise, Austin Thomas, Françoise Watin
« It was the desert who caught me » tells the many stories one encounters in the desert, a desert that can be understood both as geographical and metaphorical. Lost loves, a search for meaning, the yearning of finding one’s place in the world, newly found desires, past and future connections, inner turmoil and outside stillness, each viewer will perceive what the desert wishes them to see. On display, heirlooms of the desert, books paving the way to understanding one’s own quests, and artworks created by artists whose resilient souls show us that a dreamer’s heart is made of diamond. It will not splinter, it will not shatter. Indestructible, it will shine even brighter with every new chisel. « It was the desert who caught me » is a celebration of all dreamers. and ultimately, a love letter to following a heart that dares to dream.