November 6, 2025
David Gilbert
I Capture the Castle
Chris Sharp Gallery
October 11 - November 15, 2025

David Gilbert
David Gilbert is a Los Angeles based artist whose primary medium is photography. While large as well as small scale photographs are the ultimate outcome of his endeavors, he could also be considered a sculptor and installation artist, although his constructions are made for his camera. Within the confines of his studio, he creates environments for imagined encounters that evoke transcendence. The photographs in his previous exhibition at the gallery were poetic meditations that juxtaposed drawings, draped fabric and paper cutouts. The images in My Heavens (2022) tracked the qualities of light through the day as it filtered through an open window. They asked questions about permanence in relation to atmospheric and ephemeral movements.
For I Capture the Castle, he similarly uses the walls of his studio and sunlight filtering through windows for compositions that feature hand cut paper and cardboard castles. In fairy tales, castles are often presented as enchanted and magical, but they can also be sites of power and violence. In many of Gilbert's photographs, the castle is fragile and delicate, precariously positioned in the frame in numerous configurations.
Though only thirteen by eight inches Ramparts, (all works 2025) is a densely layered scene. Here, Gilbert places a brown cardboard cut out of ramparts (defensive towers) on a table in front of a wall covered by a pencil drawing of a stone facade. Push-pinned to the castle is a small paper bag that might hold pastries. It is decorated with reproductions of a monarch butterfly and a yellow daffodil. Bits of colored twine and torn pieces of fabric are draped over a table and cascade to the floor. Intermingled with them is a vine with purple/blue flowers. Emanating from one of the castle towers are green vines roughly drawn with some kind of marker. The image is a dramatically lit construction more inviting than menacing in its ambiguity.
Moving from small to large is the mural sized photograph Leaves. Though no castle is depicted in this image, a lacy white transparent piece of silk flutters in the light against a pink wall that contrasts with actual green vines that hug the left side of the picture. Pink is also the predominant color of Keep. Push-pinned to a piece of pink seamless backdrop paper is a paper castle twisted to emphasize its three-dimensional form. A single piece of twine hangs from the tack that holds the castle in place and dangles down until it is cropped by the bottom of the composition. The castle is in rough shape as if it has seen better days, a relic of another place and time.
Stronghold (pink) and Stronghold (blue) are photographs of the same scene, though differently colored by light, indicating changes in the time of day. Gilbert plays with the dual definitions of stronghold — "a place that has been fortified so as to protect it against attack" and "a place where a particular cause or belief is defended or upheld." In both pictures, a delicate outline of a castle created with thread and cut paper loosely droops from pieces of tape that barely hold it to the wall. Light filters in from an unseen window casting rectangular shadows on the wall that suggest a landscape. The images make an interesting set — opposites and complements as the photograph that is pink has orange highlights, while the blue image has yellow-green accents.A castle is a facade and Gilbert uses it and all of its numerous manifestations to examine inside and out, the psychology of fear and entrapment, and the feminizing of masculine space. The works are ghostlike and airy. Gilbert delights in creating uncanny and ambiguous scenes, devoid of people yet filled with longing. There is a rawness, as well as a humanness to his constructions. The works are undeniably beautiful, yet allude to a hidden darkness beyond their visually appealing facades.
Click here for David Gilbert on its own page.