Chanell Stone: Undulation of a Rupture, presented in Gallery 20 of the San Diego Museum of Art from March 21 through August 16, 2026, explores the Mississippi River as both a geographic presence and a vessel of memory. Through a series of monumental black-and-white photographs, the California-based artist Chanell Stone reflects on the layered histories embedded in the river’s currents. Created during an extended journey through the Mississippi Delta, the images engage with landscape not simply as scenery but as a living archive where environmental forces and human stories converge.
Stone’s photographs possess a striking physical presence. Their large scale and deep tonal range evoke the density and movement of water itself, drawing viewers into surfaces that appear both reflective and impenetrable. Rather than offering clear horizons or picturesque views, the images linger in ambiguity—rippling water, shadowed banks, and textures that dissolve into abstraction. This visual language mirrors the river’s immense power while suggesting histories that remain submerged within the American landscape. The Mississippi emerges not only as a natural system but also as a historic route through which commerce, migration, and exploitation unfolded over centuries.
Central to Stone’s practice is an exploration of Black identity within broader narratives of the African diaspora. In
Undulation of a Rupture, the river becomes a conduit for personal reflection as well as historical inquiry. The Mississippi connects inland territories to the Gulf of Mexico and the wider Atlantic world, a geography that inevitably intersects with the history of the transatlantic slave trade and the movement of enslaved people through the American South. By confronting these histories through atmospheric imagery, Stone invites viewers to consider how landscapes carry traces of violence, survival, and resilience.
Working between Northern and Southern California, Stone approaches photography as both investigation and meditation. Her broader practice combines self-portraiture, abstraction, and environmental observation, weaving personal memory into collective histories. Within this exhibition, the river’s surface becomes a metaphorical threshold where past and present meet. The resulting images encourage quiet contemplation, allowing the natural world to speak as witness to stories that continue to shape cultural and historical consciousness.
Image:
Chanell Stone, River Standing, 2022. Archival Pigment Print. San Diego Museum of Art; Museum purchase with funds from the Bequest of Dr. Janet Brody Esser, 2024.49.