Kerlin Gallery is pleased to present The struggle with the angel, a new exhibition by Gerard Byrne.

In Autumn 2008, Gerard Byrne bought a used camera from a friend for cash. For 17 years since that day, the camera (a Mamiya 7 analogue stills camera) has travelled far and wide with the artist, giving rise to an ongoing photographic project. The struggle with the angel presents the first comprehensive exhibition from this body of work.

The struggle with the angel revolves around a suite of selenium-toned silver gelatin photographs, each hand-printed by Byrne in a darkroom he built solely to produce this project. Pyramids in Mexico, the apex of a corrugated shed roof in Broadstone, Palestinian murals, the US Airforce, prone artists, prone marble nudes, graveyards, the deceased, St Francis, Gandhi, sons, mothers, friends, other artists, strangers. The field of references accumulated across these photographs is broad and tolerant.

While the references and motifs are diverse, the central question for Byrne is an ethical consideration of how photographs could connect worlds. Byrne’s project leans into the limitations of his Mamiya 7 camera (held together by rubber bands for the past few years), of film, and of his temporary darkroom, to accumulate a constellation of direct relations to people, places and times that contrasts starkly with the current photographic cultural paradigm. No computer, phone, AI software, or Instagram posts play any role in developing the photographs that make up this work. As such, the new work continues a recurring attitude present across Byrne’s practice, of recalling moments of cultural and technological bifurcation, namely the moment in which an idea splits into two possibilities, one of which is abandoned. Much of Byrne’s work has pondered those abandoned possibilities and alternative choices in the light of the current context.