Michael Cherney and the Vanishing Landscape: Photography Between History and Contemplation

Michael Cherney and the Vanishing Landscape: Photography Between History and Contemplation
#Exhibitions
Michael Cherney, Jiang Kou, 2012, Photographic print on Mitsumata paper, 25.5 × 323 cm | Courtesy Michael Cherney

There is a moment in Michael Cherney’s photography when the world seems to hold its breath. His images do not seek spectacle, but rather the fragile instant in which the landscape withdraws from view and, precisely for that reason, reveals itself. The exhibition brings together several bodies of his work, forming a journey that moves across shifting scales and temporalities - from the nearly microscopic to expansive natural scenes, from historical relics to territories marked by profound transformation.
At the core of Cherney’s practice lies an idea of travel that has little to do with nostalgia and much to do with the search for what endures within the flow of history. The places he photographs, often connected to Chinese literary and artistic tradition, become sites of inquiry rather than monuments to be admired - sensitive surfaces on which time leaves ambiguous traces. His use of low resolution and deliberately grainy textures produces a visual language in which obscurity does not conceal but opens up space. The image does not grasp reality; it brushes against it, leaving viewers to complete what they see. Among the works on view, a major series devoted to the course of the Yangtze River stands out, observed at a moment of historical transition. Here the landscape becomes a living archive: mountains, rivers, cities, and heavy industry coexist in an unstable balance, offering a quiet yet incisive vision of change. Taken as a whole, the exhibition reveals a practice that brings photography close to the tradition of ink landscape painting, transforming it into a space for contemplation, memory, and imagination.

Viola Canova - © 2026 ARTE.it for Bvlgari Hotel Beijing