
Kerlin Gallery is delighted to present Late Spring, an exhibition of analogue photographs taken by Samuel Laurence Cunnane in the Spring of 2023.
Late Spring is the latest instalment in a multiyear project made while driving across continental Europe. Cunnane captures moments of idiosyncratic beauty that catch his eye as he passes from place to place, documenting the surfaces and textures of urban and rural locales and the peripheral zones between them: signposts, building sites, midcentury architecture; the tangled woodlands and desolate roadsides that orbit our settlements. There’s a sense that the grandeur of modernity has ebbed away here, been layered over with new, makeshift infrastructures.
A supermarket wall clipped free of its tiles becomes a blank abstract painting; a fence cuts through a French modernist seaside resort – the kind the artist’s grandparents would holiday in; a synthetic curtain flares in the light of a tiny Warsaw hotel room. Minimal in composition, the photographs often feel like the opening shots of films, poised and waiting to be animated. Late Spring also includes several portraits of the artist’s friends in moments of quiet repose. An intimate counterpoint to the transience of life on the road, they capture light falling delicately on the backs of hands, shoulders and necks, illuminating subjects who seem inattentive to the camera’s gaze. These photographs give atmospheric glimpses into their subjects’ lives and yet retain a sense of mystery – moments of meeting and passing in the anachronistic universe Cunnane so adeptly conjures.
Press release courtesy Kerlin Gallery




Samuel Laurence Cunnane works with analogue photography, capturing places, people and plants with a detached “floating eye” perspective. Whether in Guangzhou, Tehran, the Balkans, or his native Kerry, Cunnane is drawn to the unnoticed periphery: the outskirts of the city, where plants battle with concrete; the edges of housing developments, where newly built homes surround mounts of upturned earth; the frontier between interior and exterior, demarcated by fences, windows, topiary. His photographs deromanticise the popularly sentimental, with landscapes interrupted by utilitarian infrastructure, and yet their sensitivity to light, framing and texture give them a cinematic quality. Responding to the increasingly dematerialised nature of contemporary image making, Cunnane remains connected to the physicality of the production process, printing his photographs by hand in a darkroom. The resulting C-type prints are relatively small in size, resonating with the restrained, intimate nature of the work.
Kerlin Gallery was founded in Dublin in 1988. It has built an international reputation for its dedicated, meaningful representation of leading contemporary artists through its exhibition, publishing and art fair programmes. Its current site was designed by the minimalist architect John Pawson in 1994 and offers 3,600 square feet of exhibition space over two floors in the heart of Dublin City Centre.

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