2015 J. Street, Suite 101
On view from February 11 to March 8, 2026 in the Step Up Gallery at Viewpoint Photographic Art Center in Sacramento,
Kian Berreman & Jack Devlin: Headwaters presents a deeply personal and place-based collaboration rooted in the landscapes of the Sierra Nevada. The exhibition brings together two artists whose friendship began in the mountains and has evolved into a shared commitment to conservation through visual storytelling. At its core,
Headwaters reflects on origins—of rivers, relationships, and creative practices—and how these forces shape one another over time.
The photographs in
Headwaters trace the flow of the Yuba River Watershed, a vast and vital system that stretches from the granite highlands of the Sierra to the lowland marshes of the California Delta. Rather than presenting a singular narrative, the work reveals a network of interdependent forms: water, rock, forest, and human presence. The images speak quietly but insistently about balance, resilience, and fragility, acknowledging both the river’s life-giving power and the long history of environmental disruption it has endured, from extractive industries to the ongoing pressures of the Anthropocene.
This exhibition marks the early chapter of The Yuba Project, an initiative founded by Berreman and Devlin to advocate for the protection of the watershed through art and collaboration with local communities and conservation groups. The Yuba River is not only an ecological system but also the ancestral homeland of the Nisenan Tribe, and its story carries layers of cultural, environmental, and historical significance. Through photography, the artists aim to foster awareness and responsibility, encouraging viewers to consider their own relationship to the land and water that sustain them.
Kian Berreman approaches photography as both an artistic and educational practice, shaped by immersive experiences in the outdoors. Jack Devlin, a conservation photographer based internationally, brings a global perspective grounded in environmental advocacy. Together, their work in
Headwaters feels less like a conclusion than an invitation—an opening gesture toward long-term stewardship, where art becomes a current carrying memory, care, and possibility downstream.
Image:
© Jack Devlin | Yuba Patterns