
Eveningside
As an extension of his exhibition at the Musée de la Photographie in Charleroi, Belgium, Gregory Crewdson is unveiling for the first time at TEMPLON Brussels, Eveningside, his latest series of black-and-white pieces created between 2021 and 2022.

The third and final chapter of a trilogy initiated in 2012, this series of 18 photographs captivates through its striking precision and its twilight atmosphere imbued with mystery.
A pioneer of large-scale contemporary photography, Gregory Crewdson has been developing a unique photographic language over the last thirty years. Each shot is the result of a lengthy pre-production process involving storyboards, actors, set building, technicians, special effects and sophisticated lighting.
The series offers a fictional portrait of an America set in an indeterminate era. Solitary figures appear frozen in the most ordinary of daily activities, yet their meaning remains elusive. Set within suburban landscapes, these characters are often captured through a complex interplay of mirrors, storefronts, and transitional spaces—bridges, porches, mini-markets, or hardware shops. His black-and-white palette draws skilfully on an array of special effects – fog, smoke and artificial rain – to create atmospheres that are deceptively familiar yet unsettling, evoking classical cinema and film noir, as well as 1930s American documentary photography and the realism of Edward Hopper’s paintings.
Eveningside departs from Crewdson’s previous series with a slightly different format, fostering a more intimate connection with the images and inviting a heightened intimacy with the figures. The series is further marked by its explicit sociopolitical dimension: the characters inhabit landscapes shaped by economic decline and ecological urgency, caught in a fragile inbetween—between the vulnerability of the human condition and the paradoxes of the American Dream. Crewdson is never didactic, leaving the viewer free to imagine the stories hidden beneath the surface and dream of other possibilities.
Crewdson’s work also reflects on the nature of the photographic medium itself. Drawing on the scale and sophistication of American blockbuster film sets, his meticulously constructed scenes deliberately upend photography’s longstanding relationship with the real. Subtle and complex monochromatic tones further disrupt the viewer’s perception, blurring the boundary between fiction and reality.


Born in 1962 in Brooklyn, Gregory Crewdson lives and works in New York. A leading figure in American photography, he stages his photographs like films, using actors, sets, props people, storyboards and make-up artists. In this way, he addresses the dark side of the American dream as well as his own psychological issues. He believes that only photography always remains silent. There is no before and no after. The events it captures do not unveil their mystery.