No Horizon, on view at Front Room Gallery from May 22 through July 19, 2026, gathers works by nine artists who reconsider the visual and symbolic language traditionally associated with water. Featuring photography, sculpture, painting, and mixed media, the exhibition moves away from romantic seascapes and postcard imagery to examine water as an unstable and transformative force. Across the gallery, familiar visual markers such as the horizon line dissolve, leaving viewers to navigate images shaped by uncertainty, fragmentation, and shifting scale.
Artists including Sasha Bezzubov, Stephen Mallon, Shira Toren, and Zoe Wetherall approach water from markedly different perspectives, yet each challenges the expectation that aquatic imagery must provide serenity or escape. Some works focus on environmental disruption and industrial intervention, while others explore intimacy, memory, and abstraction. Reflections distort perception, submerged forms become difficult to identify, and surfaces fluctuate between beauty and menace. Water emerges not simply as scenery, but as material evidence of ecological change and human interaction with the natural world.
The exhibition arrives at a moment when conversations surrounding climate instability and rising sea levels increasingly shape contemporary art practices. Rather than illustrating these issues directly,
No Horizon addresses them through atmosphere and visual disorientation. The absence of a stable horizon becomes both a formal device and a metaphor for a world in flux. In several works, scale appears ambiguous, making it difficult to distinguish aerial landscapes from microscopic textures or environmental documentation from abstraction. This uncertainty encourages viewers to reconsider their relationship to natural systems often perceived as permanent or controllable.
Front Room Gallery has long supported interdisciplinary exhibitions that blur boundaries between conceptual and material practices, and
No Horizon continues that approach through its varied treatment of water as subject and medium. Some artists engage with erosion, flooding, and containment, while others focus on the emotional and psychological dimensions of immersion and reflection. Together, the works suggest that water resists fixed interpretation, constantly shifting between presence and absence, tranquility and threat.
By removing the comfort of clear orientation,
No Horizon transforms one of art history’s most familiar motifs into a meditation on instability, perception, and environmental vulnerability.
Image:
Zoe Wetherall, “Golf Green” 40”x60” color photograph © Zoe Wetherall