Evidence II is presented from February 27 through April 2, 2026 at Gail Severn Gallery, bringing together large-format photographs by Laura McPhee and Luis González Palma. Though distinct in subject and atmosphere, their works share a quiet investigation of the traces left by human presence. Landscapes, portraits, and fragments of everyday life reveal how memory, history, and environment intertwine, creating images that invite contemplation rather than quick conclusions.
McPhee’s photographs consider the land as a layered record of time. Working primarily in the deserts and remote regions of the American West, she documents environments where geological processes and human intervention intersect. Rivers carve slow pathways through ancient rock while mines, roads, and scattered objects testify to more recent histories. With the clarity of large-format photography, her images reveal minute details: rusted machinery, fragments of glass, discarded toys, and other remnants that quietly narrate stories of labor, settlement, and abandonment. These scenes function as visual chronicles of how landscapes absorb and reflect human ambition, resilience, and ecological consequence.
In contrast, González Palma turns his attention toward the human face. His portraits, often rooted in the cultural history of Guatemala, possess a meditative stillness that emphasizes gaze and presence. Faces appear luminous against darkened backgrounds, suggesting both intimacy and mystery. For the artist, the act of looking becomes a psychological exchange in which viewer and subject confront one another across time and experience. Through subtle tonal variations and carefully constructed compositions, the photographs explore themes of identity, memory, and the enduring weight of social and political histories.
Seen together, the works in
Evidence II form a dialogue between place and person. McPhee’s landscapes reveal environments marked by human action, while González Palma’s portraits reflect the inner worlds shaped by culture and history. Both approaches consider what photographs hold beyond the visible surface: gestures, absences, and unresolved narratives that linger long after the shutter closes.
Image:
Laura McPhee
Evening (Bent Lodgepole), Fourth of July Creek Canyon, Custer County, Idaho, 2011 1/5
Archival pigment print © Laura McPhee