Chris McCaw: Double Day, presented at SF Camerawork from May 21 through June 21, 2026, offers a rare opportunity to experience one of the Bay Area photographer’s most ambitious works on the West Coast. Organized in collaboration with Haines Gallery, the exhibition centers on McCaw’s monumental
Sunburn series, a body of work that transforms photography into a direct physical encounter with light, duration, and the movement of the Earth itself.
For more than two decades, McCaw has pushed the medium beyond traditional image-making through the use of hand-built large-format cameras and long exposures powered entirely by sunlight. In his process, concentrated rays of light pass through oversized lenses and physically scorch photographic paper over hours or even days. The resulting images exist somewhere between photograph, drawing, and scientific trace, recording not only a landscape but also the passage of time as a tangible event.
At the center of the exhibition is
Sunburned GSP #860 (Double midnight, Galbraith Lake, Arctic Circle, Alaska), created during the Arctic summer in 2015. Stretching more than 25 feet across 25 silver gelatin panels, the work documents approximately thirty continuous hours beneath the “midnight sun,” when daylight never fully disappears near the Arctic Circle. The photograph captures looping solar trajectories burned directly into the paper, while weather conditions, shifting clouds, and subtle changes in the landscape emerge across the composition. Both technically rigorous and visually overwhelming, the piece reflects McCaw’s fascination with humanity’s small position within a larger cosmic system.
Born in Daly City, California, McCaw studied photography at the San Francisco Art Institute and remains closely connected to the Bay Area’s experimental photographic tradition. His practice draws from early photographic history while simultaneously challenging contemporary assumptions about digital image production and manipulation. Rather than relying on software or postproduction, his works are shaped through elemental forces: sunlight, heat, chemistry, and time.
With
Double Day, SF Camerawork continues its long-standing support of artists redefining the possibilities of photography. The exhibition positions McCaw’s work not simply as landscape photography, but as a meditation on endurance, perception, and the physical reality of light itself.
Image:
Detail of Chris McCaw, Sunburned GSP #860 (Double midnight, Galbraith Lake, Arctic Circle, Alaska), 2015