In visual culture right now, romance is everywhere. But it rarely calls itself by that name.
While previous generations may have celebrated romance in grand, sweeping gestures, today it appears in fragments. A hand resting on a shoulder in a campaign still. Two figures leaning into each other on a runway backdrop. Grainy, film-styled portraits circulating on social feeds that feel closer to memory than documentation. Even advertising has shifted toward proximity. Faces closer to camera. Bodies turned toward each other. Candid expressions that feel interrupted rather than composed.
This visual language finds a focused expression in Romance, a new book edited by Francoise Kirkland, wife of the legendary photographer Douglas Kirkland, which launches in Sydney today at Art+ Gallery. The release is accompanied by a two-week exhibition of Douglas Kirkland’s work running from 22 April to 6 May, placing the book directly alongside the archive it draws from.
Framed as both tribute and meditation, Romance is built around love in its many forms. Romantic, familial, fleeting, remembered. Created in the wake of Douglas Kirkland’s death, it emerges from a moment of profound reflection and a return to the emotional language of photography that defined his life and career.
The structure avoids a linear reading of Kirkland’s work and instead moves through its emotional register. The images are widely recognised for their proximity to cultural icons. Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn, Brigitte Bardot, Coco Chanel. Figures who shaped the visual language of cinema and fashion across decades. In Kirkland’s photographs, they are not held at a distance. They appear in moments that feel unguarded, where control softens and the camera stays close enough for gesture and hesitation to remain visible.
Alongside these portraits, Romance gathers quieter images that sit outside celebrity entirely. Couples mid-gesture. Bodies leaning into each other without performance. A hand resting without symbolic weight. These are not images constructed around revelation. They hold attention without directing it.
The book includes an introduction by Baz Luhrmann and Catherine Martin, whose own visual language has long explored stylised intimacy and heightened emotion. Their presence situates Kirkland’s work within a cinematic lineage, though the photographs themselves resist escalation. They remain grounded in observation rather than construction.
Francoise Kirkland’s role in shaping Romance is evident in its sequencing. The images are arranged without strict chronology, allowing emotional rhythm to guide structure. What emerges is not a retrospective, but a sustained attention to how connection appears when it is not staged for effect.
The context in which the book is released sits within a wider shift in visual culture. Contemporary image-making is saturated with gestures of intimacy. Social platforms circulate portraits that privilege closeness over clarity. Fashion campaigns increasingly frame interaction as their central subject. Even commercial imagery borrows the language of softness, proximity and touch.
Yet the repetition of these cues has created its own tension. As romance becomes more visible, it also becomes more coded. Familiar. Easily reproduced. The emotional charge that once came from proximity risks being absorbed into aesthetic shorthand.
Romance sits slightly apart from this cycle. The photographs predate digital visual language, but they speak to the same desire for closeness. The difference lies in restraint. Nothing in Kirkland’s images signals intimacy as effect. It is present, but not directed. Held, but not explained.
A phrase runs through the book, “Quand on aime, on a toujours vingt ans”. When one loves, one is forever twenty. It does not function as sentiment, but as condition. A way of describing how attention shifts when directed toward another person, and how time softens in response.
In Sydney, the accompanying exhibition extends this thinking into physical space. Douglas Kirkland’s photographs are presented in a setting that slows the act of looking. Works that once moved through magazines and screens now require duration. The gallery becomes a site where proximity is no longer immediate, but considered.
What connects Romance to the broader resurgence of romantic imagery is not style, but attention. Across contemporary culture, there is a return to images that hold people together within the frame. Not as spectacle, but as presence. The interest lies in how connection is seen, and how long it can remain visible before it dissolves into pattern.
Francoise Kirkland’s framing of the archive brings that question forward without forcing resolution. The book does not define romance as category or aesthetic. It treats it as a way of looking that persists across time, even as the language around it changes.
Sydney becomes the setting for this return. A launch, an exhibition, and a body of work that continues to move between public image and private memory. What remains is not closure, but a sustained encounter with photographs that hold connection without finishing it.
Francoise Kirkland will travel to Sydney for the launch of Romance – with the the book to be shown alongside a two-week exhibition of his work running from 22 April to 6 May with a special event at Art+ Gallery.