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Paul Mpagi Sepuya

POSITIONER

May 31July 19, 2025

Gallery III

This image illustrates a link to the exhibition titled Paul Mpagi Sepuya: POSITIONER

Vielmetter Los Angeles is excited to present POSITIONER, a solo exhibition of new works by Paul Mpagi Sepuya. The exhibition marks Sepuya’s third exhibition with the gallery and will be on view from May 31 through July 19, 2025.

Positioner (noun) is defined as “one that positions” and as “a mechanical device for placing or holding a body in position during an operation.” In Sepuya’s photographs, there are numerous “positioners” or “support structures” that anchor his compositions in the studio space: his own body, tripods, props such as benches or stools, mirrors, curtains, and stainless steel gazing balls. These “positioners” are stabilizing forces within Sepuya’s photographic space as the viewer orients themselves within the space of the image. The gazing balls reflect an outward image of the scene behind the camera or the space behind the image, both revealing and underscoring the studio space and the process of image-making.

Sepuya utilizes the gazing ball, a centuries-old object turned industrialized prop, to interject into the process of perception and representation. In Conversation with Gazing Ball (_DSF8251), two figures with gazes cast downwards flank the gazing ball situated in the center of the image which reveals the photographer’s studio in a fisheye lens perspective. The black curtain backdrop dramatizes the centrifugal force of the gazing ball’s refracted space and focuses the viewer’s attention on the object and figures surrounding it. Sepuya thus centralizes the idea of the photographer and the positioner occupying space within the frame of the image, rather than being positioned as a controlling force outside of the image.

Referencing the visual ploy of reflection used to illustrate sculptural space in pictures, Sepuya also refers to 19th-century photographic customs of positioning a mirror at an angle to reveal the figure or object in the background. This reference point extends Sepuya’s examination of the image and image-making space and critiques the relationship between the model and photographer. Sepuya creates a symbiotic relationship between the photographer and the photographed, positioning his camera and himself strictly in relation to his friends, focusing on seeing themselves as opposed to being seen by the viewer. This subtle shift in power dynamics creates a space for Queer bodies’ self-actualization and aims to make bodily autonomy visible in the process of image-making.

The impulse to make the mechanics of the photographic process visible is also explored in Sepuya’s dye-sublimation prints. These works, the majority of which were taken at night with white light, are negative images. The negative image creates a forensic quality, making evident the physical marks (like smudges on the mirror) and heightening them. These imprints suggest a taxonomy of the photographic process and unveil the often unseen elements of the pictorial space.

The works in POSITIONER are burgeoned from years of experimentation in the studio and collaboration with friends. Focusing on smaller scaled works, Sepuya’s photographs are an intimate, yet powerful portrait of his community, threading numerous themes into a singular and compelling aesthetic.

About the artist

Paul Mpagi Sepuya was born in 1982 in San Bernardino, California, and lives and works in Los Angeles. He received an MFA in photography at UCLA in 2016. From 2000 – 2014, Sepuya lived and worked in New York City, receiving a BFA from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts in 2004.

Sepuya’s work is in the permanent collections of the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; MOCA Los Angeles; the Museum of Modern Art; the Whitney Museum of American Art; the Guggenheim Museum; the Studio Museum in Harlem; the International Center for Photography, New York; the Cleveland Museum of Art; the Milwaukee Art Museum; and the Carnegie Museum; among others. Solo museum exhibitions include Exposure, at Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham, England; Double Enclosure at Fotomuseum Amsterdam (2018); Paul Mpagi Sepuya, a survey of work from 2006-2018 at Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. Recent museum exhibitions also include the Whitney Biennial 2019; Being: New Photography 2018 at the Museum of Modern Art (2018); Trigger at the New Museum, New York (2018); the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN; Contemporary Art Museum, Houston, Texas; the Guggenheim Museum, New York; and the Getty Museum, Los Angeles. Sepuya will also have a solo show with Los Angeles Nomadic Division (LAND) this fall. Aperture published a major monograph on Sepuya’s work in 2024, Paul Mpagi Sepuya: Dark Room A–Z with texts by Sepuya and Gökcan Demirkazik.

Sepuya’s work has been covered and published in ​ARTFORUM​, ​Aperture, ​The ​New Yorker, The ​New York Times,​ ​Art Review​, ​Frieze​, ​Art in America,​ ​Monocle,​ ​Osmos,​ The ​Nation​, among others. He was a recipient of the 2019 Rauschenberg Residency. He is the Associate Professor in Media Arts at the University of California San Diego and has taught at CalArts and Bard MFA.