Press Release
Galerie Eva Presenhuber is pleased to present the tenth solo exhibition by US artist Sam Falls.
International ongoing exhibitions
As a young man, Sam Falls became eager to leave behind the farm in a small Vermont town where he had grown up with his mother. With a population of 3,000, the pre-
This contrasts the conditions of his artist peers, who already in 2010 had too little money to afford more than small studio spaces in the outer boroughs of Manhattan. He feels that they were all making art to survive rather than surviving to make art, and this sacrifice led them to make the same type of work: what was then called ‘petit abstraction’. According to Falls, this felt “elitist, alienating, and isolated” and, at best, would have corresponded “with questions of test, rather than pursuits of beauty” or with unnecessary attempts to translate the writings of Adorno and Derrida into visual art.
The problem was that it was difficult to find inspiration and originality within the confines of his atelier because he wasn’t connecting with it on an emotional level. Believing still in an avant-
Falls has always had a strong passion for natural spaces. Even in high school, he wanted to become a landscape photographer and admired the work of Ansel Adams, Eliot Porter, and Edward Weston. However, he did not want to simply imitate them. Instead, he sought other ways to approach spaces without an intervening apparatus, aiming to capture their essence in a manner that would do justice to the spaces and the diversity of ecosystems. He planned to use the typical flora of a region as a medium and motif to characterize space in his works. Unlike Cézanne, Falls does not work parallel to nature, but with and within it. Oscillating between photography and painting, he strives for an “indexical one-
That is why, Falls put aside the camera and all associated media, including the cyanotype, adopting the practices of early photography by creating collages and exposing them to light. In essence, he declared nature to be an equal partner with whom he engaged in a dialogue. Initially working in Los Angeles, he used non-
How does he go about it? He lays out large canvases outdoors and places organic material on top of them. The flora varies by place and season, for this exhibition partly made in Upstate New York, he has used native wildflowers, invasive weeds, and historic farmland grasses. In Los Angeles, he uses seagrass and kelp from the Pacific Ocean. “The plants don’t have to be native. They could have been brought here from China 100 years ago or Europe 200 yeas ago and spread in such a way that they embody the area’s essence and have become representative of it,” explains Falls. After spreading the plants on the canvas, he throws pigments into the air above them. The windier it is, the more the pigments spread out. The weaker the wind blows, the flatter the pigments land, creating smaller, denser areas of color.
Knowing that weather conditions can distort the appearance of a landscape, and that these conditions tend to be atypical there, Falls takes care not to expose his nascent works to such conditions on the wrong day. As is typical of Upstate New York in the summer, it didn’t rain very much, so Falls worked with the regular and excessive nighttime humidity to portray this warm period. Unlike pigments, which expand and mix when it rains, becoming lighter and more diluted so that the images appear watercolor-
Essentially, Falls’ work is a monument to nature’s evolution over time and a different understanding of humanity. Rather than setting themselves apart from nature, people strive for harmony with it. This presupposes that he has studied and understood the area, its connections, and the processes taking place in nature.
Heinz-
Sam Falls was born 1984 in San Diego, CA, and lives and works in Los Angeles, CA, and Upstate New York. He has created his own formal language by intertwining photography’s core parameters of time and exposure with nature and her elements. Working largely outdoors with vernacular materials and nature as a sitespecific subject, Falls abandons mechanical reproduction in favor of a more symbiotic relationship between subject and object. In doing so, he bridges the gap between photography, sculpture, and painting, as well as the divide between artist, object, and viewer.
In October 2025, a solo exhibition by Sam Falls will be held at Simose Museum, Hiroshima, JP. Recent solo exhibitions by Sam Falls were hald at Cookie Factory, Denver, CO, US (2025); MOCA Cleveland, OH, US (2023); Mori Museum in Tokyo, JP (2022); Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA, US (2018); Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art Trento and Rovereto, IT (2018); The Kitchen, New York, NY, US (2015); Ballroom Marfa, Texas, TX, US (2015); Pomona College Museum of Art, CA, US (2014); Public Art Fund, New York, NY, US (2014); and LAXART, Los Angeles, CA, US (2013), among others. His work has been included in group exhibitions at Musée Yves Saint Laurent, Paris, FR (2024); Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris, FR (2024); Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-
Exhibition 20 September -
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