A solo show of portraits in New York, photographing women without the male gaze as intermediary.
May 13. Primary Photographic opens Womanizer, a solo exhibition by Brianna Capozzi, in the Rectangle Room through June 14. The show pairs with a new book of the same name.
Capozzi photographs women. Not fashion editorials, not campaigns. Portraits where the subject holds the frame without performing for anyone. The work sidesteps the usual register: no soft light, no gaze borrowed from mid-century Vogue, no borrowed masculinity to signal strength. Just women, shot straight.
The title reclaims the term from its usual slot. A womanizer, here, is the photographer herself. The women she photographs are not objects of pursuit. They are collaborators in how they want to be seen. That shift in authorship changes the temperature of the room.
The Rectangle Room at Primary Photographic is a small space. Fourteen prints, roughly. The book release runs concurrent, available at the gallery and through Primary's site. Edition details weren't disclosed in the release, but the gallery typically runs signed first editions under 500 copies.
Capozzi has shown at galleries in Los Angeles and Paris over the past three years, but this is her first New York solo in a dedicated photo space. The work has been passed around in group shows and zine circuits for longer than that. This is the first time it gets a room to itself and a book to carry it forward.
The show runs through mid-June. Open Thursday through Saturday, 12:00–18:00, by appointment outside those hours.
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