Victoria Sambunaris: Fall Line, presented at Yancey Richardson from May 29 through July 2, 2026, examines the fragile geography of the American West through a series of monumental landscape photographs focused on the Colorado River system and its diminishing waterways. Known for her long-term exploration of the American landscape, Sambunaris continues her investigation into how infrastructure, industry, and environmental change reshape territories historically associated with wilderness and expansion. The exhibition follows years of travel across the Southwest, where the photographer traced the intersections between water scarcity, human intervention, and the enduring mythology of the West.
Working with a five-by-seven wooden field camera, Sambunaris creates highly detailed images that balance grandeur with quiet tension. The photographs move from the drought-stricken edges of the Colorado River to the temporary lake that formed at Death Valley’s Badwater Basin after Hurricane Hilary. Roads, pipelines, electrical lines, and housing developments appear almost imperceptibly within vast desert panoramas, suggesting the steady but relentless imprint of civilization on landscapes often imagined as untouched. The title
Fall Line refers both to the movement of water across terrain and to invisible boundaries shaped by geology, settlement, and power.
Sambunaris has spent more than twenty-five years crossing the United States on extended road trips, documenting how natural environments become sites of extraction, recreation, and economic ambition. Her photographs echo the visual traditions of 19th-century survey photographers who helped define perceptions of the American frontier, yet her work introduces a contemporary awareness of environmental precarity and climate instability. The images remain patient and observational, often requiring hours of waiting for precise light conditions before exposure.
Born in Pennsylvania and based in New York, Sambunaris studied at Yale University School of Art and has exhibited widely at institutions including the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the National Gallery of Art. Her recent monograph,
Transformation of a Landscape, expands upon the themes explored in
Fall Line, combining photographs with maps, journals, and archival material gathered during her travels. The exhibition presents the American West not as a fixed symbol of permanence, but as a landscape increasingly defined by fragility, adaptation, and uncertainty.
Image:
Victoria Sambunaris, Untitled, (Wahweap marina), Lake Powell, Page, Arizona, 2023. Archival pigment print, 39 x 55 inches.