jdc Fine Art announces our participation in
The Photo Show 2026 Presented by AIPAD | Association of International Photography Art Dealers
April 22-26, 2026
Park Avenue The Armory
Booth D 11
jdc Fine Art will present a group show of represented artists. We will lead with a selection of recent works by Matt Eich and harmonize with work by Jennifer Greenburg, Billie Mandle, and Paul Turounet.
The curated selection of works lends physicality to place and explore dual/opposing states- life and death, youth and adulthood, darkness and light, love, benevolence, and consumption- existing simultaneously. We will bring artist’s books/monographs/portfolios that relate to existing artists’ projects. Remarks on individual artists and featured works follows.
Sunlight, Shadow, Rainbow and more recent work, Grace Notes by Matt Eich are tonally rich and emotionally nuanced. A pivot from earlier work on the American condition, these projects are intimate and familiar yet prove illusive. Poetic and painterly, moody and psychologically charged they are bathed by light or obscured by darkness. Seeing them requires an observation that slows our experience and connects us with something primal. These images are evidence of the magical essence of life.
In Revising History Jennifer Greenburg replaces the central figure in a found mid-century negative with an image of herself, “playing them.” Performance, knowledge of materials and the labor of the artist’s hand are critical to creating the seamless photographs. Revising History considers the pitfall of our desire to project idealism and prove individuality through aesthetics. They are a way to examine how our own photographs reinforce cultural tropes. Most images are completely anonymous and unattached to the original author or context. I met the man of my future modeling in the car of tomorrow, 2018 is unusual in that we know something about the subject- it was a prototype car, only two were ever built. The non-functional Firebird II featured a titanium body. It was shown on the 1956 GM Motorama show circuit as well as other auto show venues through the decade.
Billie Mandle creates photographs that address themes of place, perception, and the ephemeral. In Blue Ground Billie Mandle documents community gardens of group homes for people with a range of mental and physical abilities. Mandle positioned her large format camera in the grass and captured the flowers and weeds that grew- strange and fragile, strong yet exposed. These images were overlayed with shades of blue sampled from medical supplies. Blue is the hardest color for the human eye to perceive and naturally rare in nature.
Beneath the Dirt of Great Men exposes the carbon landscape of oil pumping jacks and waste water fracking ponds in the permian Basin of Southeast New Mexico and West Texas, also known as the “petroleum graveyard.” Wall display of select book plate prints to be shown beside complete book, which contains additional images, a map, summary statement and colophon.
This work is from a larger project, Somewhere Out There, Something is Happening. Turounet’s sweeping study of the physical places and psychological spaces of the contemporary American social landscape. Rendered as limited edition handmade artist’s books and prints, the work considers our inescapable history and whether what is past is a prologue of something happening now.
This nuanced body of work includes scenes the artist encountered across the American landscape. They consider place as they coalesce around three themes: critical moments in history; natural resources, land use, and climate change; and identity and gender. Several additional books from the project to be available for view.
