Bubi Canal, Contemporary Arts Center, Fine Art Photography, Video Artist, Aperture Foundation, New York Magazine, New York Times, British Journal of Photography, Foam Talent, Sculpture, Portrait Photography,  Still Life Photo

Gloaming, 2019

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Panorama, 2019

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Bubi Canal, Contemporary Arts Center, Fine Art Photography, Video Artist, Aperture Foundation, New York Magazine, New York Times, British Journal of Photography, Foam Talent, Sculpture, Portrait Photography,  Still Life Photo

Arrebol, 2019

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Bubi Canal, Contemporary Arts Center, Fine Art Photography, Video Artist, Aperture Foundation, New York Magazine, New York Times, British Journal of Photography, Foam Talent, Sculpture, Portrait Photography,  Still Life Photo

Bridge, 2019 

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Cosmovision, 2019 

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Island, 2019

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Bubi Canal, Contemporary Arts Center, Fine Art Photography, Video Artist, Aperture Foundation, New York Magazine, New York Times, British Journal of Photography, Foam Talent, Sculpture, Portrait Photography,  Still Life Photo

Goor Age, 2019

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Peku, 2019

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Bubi Canal, Contemporary Arts Center, Fine Art Photography, Video Artist, Aperture Foundation, New York Magazine, New York Times, British Journal of Photography, Foam Talent, Sculpture, Portrait Photography,  Still Life Photo

Tártaro, 2019

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Wonderful Mission, 2019

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Nightrise, 2019

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Lia, 2019

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Dreamer, 2019

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Into the Gloaming is a photographic series by interdisciplinary artist, Bubi Canal (b. 1980, Spain). Canal’s lens-based work combines elements of pop culture with intuition, to manifest dreamlike characters from alternate realities. Using bright colorful subjects set against otherworldly landscapes at dusk, Canal imbues his work with optimism and innocence—but most importantly, to transmit hope and possibilities for the future.


This series of photographs, were shot in New York and Santander, Spain, during the transitional time between day and night—the gloaming. In it, the artist presents a personal universe of characters that reflect his expansive imagination and influences as diverse as Cantabrian mythologies and vintage Japanese television shows—creating his own distinctive folklore for a contemporary audience.


Shooting portraits of those he knows intimately, (including himself) the artist scripts fantastical scenarios—allowing his subjects to communicate viscerally via natural posture and spontaneous gesture.


In the accompanying video, Cosmovision, Canal follows signs through the landscape, taking a semiotic journey of discovery. In Spanish, “cosmovisión” means a particular take on the world and its values. Thus, Canal explores his own internal landscape by going beyond any limits of reason and entering into the unknown. At the core of Canal’s work is the idea that we have the power to manipulate and change the world that surrounds us in order to realize our dreams.


— Maria Seda-Reeder