Julie Saul Gallery is pleased to announce Heavenly Creatures, their thirteenth solo exhibition with Sally Gall (DG 2018) during their thirty-two year representation of her work. The exhibition marks the publication of her third monograph, Heavenly Creatures. Both exhibition and book combine her most recent work Heavenly Creatures (2016-2018) with her related and previous series, Aerial (2014-2016.)

Heavenly Creatures are kites, billowing in the air, as observed at festivals in Italy, Denmark, Washington and New Jersey. Gall records the skyward movement of cloth and paper flying machines, fragile objects connected to earth by tenuous strings – and like laundry, a universal human occupation. As in Aerial, these images are transformative, a celebration of color and suggestive abstract form. Both Aerial and Heavenly Creatures continue Sally Gall’s lifetime investigation of the sensual properties of the natural world; light, air, wind, and sky. Abstracted by composition, context, and color, these anthropomorphic photographs suggest sea creatures, constellations and other planetary forces, blooming flowers, microscopic amoebas.

Gall states “…I’m drawn to abstract painters that reference a landscape just by a few strokes of paint…” Indeed, the abstract forms against bright and atmospheric sky evoke Joan Miro, Wassily Kandinsky, Georgia O’Keefe and Howard Hodgkins, among others. Both Aerial and Heavenly Creatures embody Sally Gall’s search for poetry in the everyday, the miraculous in the ordinary, and as Fischl observes “capturing the elusive distractions of fleeting beauty.”

Sally Gall received a BFA in photography from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1978. She has taught and lectured internationally including at the School of Visual Arts, and the International Center of Photography, in New York. She has been the recipient of two Macdowell Colony Fellowships, a Rockefeller Foundation Residency, Bellagio Study Center, and a Director’s Guest at the Civitella Ranieri Foundation. Her two previous monographs are The Water’s Edge, Chronicle Books, 1995, and Subterranea, Umbrage Editions, 2003.

Runs January 3 – March 2, 2019. More information here.