1311 E. 15th St.
Only the Landscape Has Changed invites viewers into a contemplative space where three artists—
Pentti Sammallahti, Chico Seay, and Wesley Stringer—approach the familiar world with distinct yet harmonious sensitivity. Their works, gathered in this new exhibition at The Hulett Collection, reveal the ways quiet observation can anchor us in an ever-shifting present. As the surroundings transform with season, memory, and passage, these artists show how moments of stillness continue to hold meaning.
Sammallahti’s photographs carry the unmistakable calm of someone who has spent a lifetime watching the horizon. His images blend intimacy with expansiveness, allowing a lone bird, a path of snow, or a pale sky to become meditations on distance and nearness. Each scene feels suspended, as if time has briefly softened its grip, offering a glimpse into the delicate bond between solitude and presence.
Chico Seay turns toward the Southern landscape with an eye sharpened by memory. His photographs often feel like recollections anchored in place—quiet corners where light, texture, and history converge. Through this lens, the familiar becomes layered with emotion, revealing how the land holds stories long after the moment has passed. Seay’s work invites viewers to sense the echoes beneath the surface, where personal and collective memory intertwine.
Wesley Stringer, by contrast, gravitates toward the peripheries of contemporary life. He finds clarity in what is often overlooked: the fleeting gesture, the shift of shadow, the temporary arrangement of everyday forms. In these understated scenes, Stringer uncovers an order that appears and dissolves almost at once, reminding us of the rhythm found in ordinary transitions.
Together, Sammallahti, Seay, and Stringer create a quiet conversation about time’s movement and the resilience of perception. Their works suggest that although the landscapes around us may transform, the act of truly seeing—rooted in patience, humility, and attention—remains constant.
Image:
Pentti Sammallahti Finnish, b. 1950
Katonah, New York, 2000
Gelatin silver print
Image 6.5 x 6.5" | Paper 8 x 10" | Matted 11 x 14"" at The Hulett Collection © Pentti Sammallahti