1329 Willoughby Ave. 2A
Angle of Incidence by J.B. Morton, on view at Transmitter Gallery from February 7 to March 8, 2026, presents a body of work that reconsiders how we encounter nature in the built world. Morton’s photographs resist the comfort of the picturesque, turning instead toward moments where attention sharpens: the edge of a sidewalk, a spill of light across brick, the subtle choreography of lines and shadows shaped by weather and time. Nature is not distant or idyllic here, but immediate—embedded in everyday surroundings and alive with motion and tension.
Working primarily in black and white, Morton focuses on rhythm and structure rather than description. His images trace repeating forms that never quite resolve, guided by shifts in light and atmosphere that give weight to air itself. These photographs suggest nature as a process rather than a place—something constantly reorganizing, even within spaces shaped by human habit. The eye is invited to linger, not to rest, but to follow the unpredictable logic of change as it unfolds across surfaces both familiar and overlooked.
This inquiry deepens in Morton’s cyanotype Grain Pictures, where observation gives way to direct material engagement. Using wooden shavings gathered from his work as a picture framer, Morton employs contact printing to reveal forms at a near-cellular scale. Suspended in blue fields, these organic fragments resemble sediment drifting through water or thoughts passing through consciousness. The process sits between craft and experiment, emphasizing touch, chance, and transformation as integral to seeing.
Across
Angle of Incidence, Morton narrows the distance between looking and making. Found materials and photographic tools merge into images that reflect how culture and nature increasingly overlap, often inseparably. The work suggests that our technologies—artistic or otherwise—shape how we understand the world and ourselves within it. Presented within Transmitter’s experimental, multidisciplinary context, the exhibition offers a measured but insistent reminder of our material foundations, urging viewers to reconsider how attention, intuition, and environment intersect in an age of constant mediation.
Image:
Courtesy of J.B. Morton