Wheaton Mahoney’s
The Forgotten returns to the Griffin Museum this summer as an outdoor, site-specific installation that places abandoned portrait photographs in the museum’s trees and interior spaces. Running from June 5 to September 28, 2026, the project is part of the museum’s ongoing
Illuminating The Archive series, created in partnership with founder Arthur Griffin, and transforms the museum grounds into a forest gallery where forgotten faces meet living branches.
The series grew over six years from portraits Mahoney acquired at auctions—images of strangers whose stories have been lost, discarded and left without context. Historically, portraiture has served to preserve identity and memory, yet these canvases and prints were abandoned, their subjects and histories now unknown. Mahoney’s response is to hang the portraits on trees in her back woods, supporting them on living trunks and branches that change with the seasons while the faces remain fixed in time.
The outdoor setting adds a layer of meaning to the work. The trees suggest a family tree, connecting the subjects to their earthy origins and to the idea of returning to nature. As the seasons shift, light and shadow move across the portraits, emphasizing the passage of time even as the images themselves stay ageless. Mahoney also gives each subject a title, adding a new layer of character and narrative to the anonymous figures.
Mahoney (born 1970) is a Rhode Island School of Design graduate based in Western Massachusetts and Los Angeles whose conceptual work often explores time, memory and the transition from youth to adulthood. She is recognized for her use of color theory and layering techniques, and has been featured in
Medium Format Magazine and
Click Pro Magazine, among other publications. Her work has received awards from Phase One,
Shutterbug,
PhotoDistrict News and the Portrait Masters, where she holds Master’s Accreditation.
The Forgotten honors those who have slipped into obscurity, offering the subjects a final acknowledgment by placing them back into the world, suspended between memory and the natural cycle of life.
Image:
© Wheaton Mahoney