Alison Blickle: Future Ruins
On the eve of her Chelsea opening, I met Alison Blickle at Kravets Wehby Gallery to talk about Future Ruins. The paintings depict radiant, staged figures set in a dystopian future where nature has vanished and people connect only through digital avatars. At once alluring and unsettling, these works blur beauty, grief, and technology, offering both fantasy and warning.
I met Alison Blickle on the eve of her opening at Kravets Wehby Gallery in Chelsea, NYC. The paintings for Future Ruins were already on the walls, glowing under the lights, the room still hushed before the crowd. In that moment, anticipation thick but the space still private, we spoke about beauty, technology, and grief.
Blickle’s figures are radiant, staged, almost too beautiful. She doesn’t hide from it.
“That’s intentional,” she told me.
The new body of work is set in a dystopian future where nature no longer exists as we know it. People still long for connection to something larger, but the only way they can feel it is through avatars inside digital landscapes.
“You create an avatar of yourself, what you wish you looked like, and swim in oceans that no longer exist, walk through forests that have been erased. These paintings are portraits of those avatars. The beauty is stunning, but it’s also artificial. They’re not real people. They’re curated images of who someone chooses to be.”
This dystopian thread runs through Future Ruins like a warning. Filters, AI-generated faces, bodies shaped digitally, all of it feels uncomfortably close.
“It’s science fiction, but it’s also about right now,” she said.
The Cinematic Image
When I asked about the cinematic quality of her compositions, Blickle traced it back to photography.
“I’ve studied images from the 1920s, ’30s, ’40s, and I’m inspired by fashion photographers working today. They’re some of the most inventive artists, even though they’re placed in a commercial zone. Their editorials often echo classical painting, history paintings, big groups enacting narratives, dramatic compositions. They create little worlds. That’s what I admire, and what I try to do myself. I stage the image like a photographer before I paint.”
Her women hold archetypes, muses, goddesses, rebels, but they’re also deeply personal. Blickle admits they’ve often been alter egos.
“They get to do things I wish I could do. I live vicariously through them.”
Isolation and Grief
With Future Ruins, that connection is sharper. She spoke about grief and isolation shaping this work.
“For many years I painted large groups interacting. These figures feel more isolated, and many are sad. That’s where the personal heart comes in.”
The result is a body of work that oscillates between allure and critique. The figures are dazzling, but their perfection is unsettling. They carry both the fantasy of beauty and the dystopia of its collapse.
They are avatars, beautiful, artificial, and haunted by longing.
Exhibition: Future Ruins
Alison Blickle
Kravets Wehby Gallery, Chelsea, NYC
September 4 – October 4
Q: What is Alison Blickle’s Future Ruins about?
A: The exhibition imagines a dystopian future where nature has collapsed and people connect through digital avatars. Her radiant figures are both alluring and unsettling, blurring beauty, grief, and technology.
Q: Where is Future Ruins showing?
A: The show is on view at Kravets Wehby Gallery in Chelsea, NYC, from September 4 to October 4, 2025.
Q: Why is Alison Blickle’s work important?
A: Blickle stages cinematic paintings that draw from photography, fashion, and mythology. Her figures act as alter egos, archetypes, and cultural mirrors, exploring beauty’s allure and its collapse in the digital age.
Venice, 3AM: How AI Helped Me Find My Creative Voice (2017
A sleepless night in Venice became the moment I found my creative voice—years before AI became my tool.
I wandered the alleys of Venice at 3AM with no plan just a camera, a little insomnia, and the urge to create.
That night I captured moments that haunted me for years: a woman smoking alone on a bridge, a man in the distance walking under orange streetlight, and a sunrise over a rain-slicked Piazza San Marco.
But for years, I never told the story because I didn’t have the words. I only had the images.
Today, with AI helping me find language, rhythm, and voice, I’m finally sharing what I saw and what I felt — that night.
This was the moment I began to realize I wasn’t just a photographer. I was a storyteller.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How did AI help you write this blog post?
A: I took the photos in 2017, but never shared the story. In 2025, I used AI tools to help me structure my thoughts and put my experience into words. AI helped unlock the voice behind the visuals.
Q: Does using AI make the story less personal?
A: Not at all. The story, emotions, and memory are mine AI simply helped me express it clearly.
Want more behind-the-scenes stories? Read about the Cannes Film Festival here.