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Wright Schickli Invited by Decagon Gallery

Ellen Gilkerson | Published on 4/24/2026

Wright Schickli is one of 73 photographers whose images are included in Decagon Gallery’s Second Annual Invitational Exhibition.  Decagon describes the artists and the exhibition as follows:

 

There are photographers whose work stays with you. Not because of a single image, but because something in the way they see the world begins to feel familiar. You recognize their sensibility. You remember how they approach a subject. This exhibition begins there.

 

The artists in The Second Annual Invitational Exhibition were invited because their work had already entered that space of recognition. What matters is not that every image here is definitive. It is not. What matters is that each photographer has, at some point, made something that felt real enough to hold onto. This exhibition is an extension of that moment—not a conclusion, and not a claim of mastery, but a continuation.

 

As a result, the exhibition does not move around a single theme. Instead, it moves through a range of concerns: observation and construction, stillness and disruption, clarity and ambiguity. Some images are direct, almost unguarded. Others are more deliberate, built or composed with intention. There are photographs that lean toward narrative, and others that resist it entirely.

 

What connects them is not consistency of subject or style, but a shared seriousness of intent—even when the results vary. That variation is part of the structure. In an invitational exhibition, the gesture is different from a juried selection. It is less about identifying the strongest individual images and more about acknowledging the ongoing work of seeing—work that unfolds over time, unevenly, sometimes uncertainly, but with persistence. That is what this exhibition reflects.


Decagon asked each invitee to submit four images as a mini-series and then selected one image from each for the exposition. Wright’s series comprised four photos captured early last year in Buenos Aires' Recoleta Cemetery, as he has always had strong feelings about graveyards. He assigned a feeling or emotion to each. With respect to Recoleta #3 (Fear), Wright was drawn to the way the door begins to look like a person as he used a slight downward perspective to photograph this doorway.
MbrInNews 2026_04 Schickli Recoleta3.jpg
Wright Schickli: Recoleta #3 (Fear

Decagon Gallery is an online gallery based in Brooklyn that presents contemporary photography from artists around the world — work that challenges, questions, celebrates, and re-imagines how we see. Its mission is to support photographers who are expanding visual language and redefining the possibilities of the medium today.

 

Details:

 

Decagon Gallery:

  https://www.decagongallery.com/

  info@decagongallery.com

 

Second Annual Invitational Exhibition:

 https://www.decagongallery.com/2nd-annual-invitational