Dora Somosi’s exhibition
Alchemy of Memory invites viewers into a world where nature, history, and personal reflection are woven together through the luminous medium of cyanotype. Known for her striking blue-toned prints, Somosi works with sunlight, time, and instinct to create images that feel both ephemeral and deeply rooted. In this presentation, two ongoing series —
By Her Side and
Mending — unfold as parallel meditations on legacy, renewal, and the quiet strength found in the act of making.
In
By Her Side, Somosi photographs tree branches as abstract portraits of women whose creative voices have shaped her own journey. These branches, twisting, reaching, and bearing the weight of years, stand beside the former homes and studios of artists, writers, and thinkers such as Emily Dickinson, Georgia O’Keeffe, Toni Morrison, Ruth Asawa, Agnes Martin, and
Imogen Cunningham. What emerges is a poetic visual dialogue between landscape and lineage. Each image becomes a tribute to women whose ideas continue to resonate, their presence lingering in the natural forms that marked their daily lives. Somosi first explored this approach at Steepletop, the home of Edna St. Vincent Millay, where the grounds provided the spark for an ongoing quest to honor creative foremothers through the quiet language of trees.
With
Mending, Somosi turns to a more intimate form of reconstruction. Using test prints and discarded cyanotypes as her base, she repairs and reimagines them through meticulous hand embroidery. Drawing from Hungarian folk traditions and the philosophy of Japanese kintsugi, she transforms imperfections into sites of beauty and resilience. Threads become pathways of memory, stitching together fragments that might otherwise be lost. These works highlight the power of restoration — not as an erasure of the past, but as a recognition of its value.
Through both series, Somosi reveals herself as a visual wanderer, searching for the sublime in the overlooked. Her images, layered with cultural heritage and personal insight, celebrate endurance, creativity, and the ever-present conversation between the natural world and the human spirit.
Image:
Wilma Dykeman, White Oak Tree, Asheville, NC
Hand printed cyanotype on watercolor paper © Dora Somosi