At Haines Gallery,
Once the Ocean Floor brings together four distinct photographic practices that place the natural world at the center of image-making. On view from May 8 to July 3, 2026, the group exhibition features works by John Chiara, Linda Connor, David Maisel, and Meghann Riepenhoff. Rather than treating landscape as a passive subject, the exhibition presents nature as collaborator, witness, and force, reshaping the very conditions of photographic production.
Chiara’s large-scale Ilfochrome prints, created using hand-built camera obscuras, reveal an approach where process remains visibly embedded in the final image. Light leaks, chemical drips, and physical marks are left intact, emphasizing photography as a material object rather than a seamless illusion. His new works, developed during a 2025 residency in Georgia, move between wooded thickets and open skies, balancing clarity and mystery. These images feel both intimate and monumental, shaped as much by atmosphere as by composition.
The exhibition takes its title from Connor’s long-standing series documenting the rocky landscapes of Ladakh in northern India, terrain that once lay beneath an ancient ocean. Her photographs of limestone formations and fossil-rich surfaces evoke geological time on an almost unimaginable scale. Alongside them, Maisel’s aerial views of the Great Salt Lake confront a more urgent environmental reality. His
Spiraling series transforms evaporation ponds and industrial sites into abstract fields of color and geometry, where beauty and ecological devastation exist in uneasy tension. Through these images, environmental crisis becomes both visually seductive and deeply unsettling.
Riepenhoff extends this dialogue by allowing the landscape to physically inscribe itself onto her cyanotypes. Exposed directly to water, wind, and freezing temperatures, her works carry the marks of environmental contact rather than simple representation. In her
State Shift series, crystalline forms and sweeping textures reflect the fragility of ecosystems under pressure. Together, the four artists propose a broader understanding of photography—one in which authorship is shared with the world itself. At Haines Gallery,
Once the Ocean Floor becomes not only an exhibition of images, but an invitation to reconsider how art can register our changing relationship with the planet.
Image:
David Maisel, Spiraling 6, 2024 © David Maisel, courtesy of the Haines Gallery