John Chiara: Bay Panel brings a major Bay Area work back into public view at SF Camerawork from June 26 to July 19, 2026. The exhibition, presented with Haines Gallery, centers on Chiara’s six-part horizontal image from 2020, a 24-foot-long panorama that turns the San Francisco Bay into a study of atmosphere, infrastructure and movement.
Originally commissioned by the Pilara Family Foundation and shown only briefly before going into storage,
Bay Panel now returns as the core of the exhibition. The work looks across the Bay with a wide but carefully controlled view, bringing together the Golden Gate Bridge, the city skyline, cargo ships and shifting water and sky. The image follows the tradition of panoramic landscape photography, but Chiara’s version carries visible marks of process that keep it rooted in the physical act of making.
Chiara’s practice has long been tied to large hand-built cameras that he moves around Northern California on a flatbed trailer. He describes his method as part photography, part sculpture and part event, and that description fits the work on view here. His photographs are made directly onto color paper, without a negative, leaving behind tape marks, chemical streaks, hand-cut edges and light leaks. Those traces are part of the image, not mistakes to be hidden.
The exhibition also includes additional photographs that extend Chiara’s ongoing study of Northern California’s landscapes and histories. Born in San Francisco in 1971, he has built a reputation for camera obscura-based work that rethinks how photographs are made and how they hold space. His images have entered major public collections, including the Getty, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, LACMA, the National Gallery of Art and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
At SF Camerawork,
Bay Panel presents the Bay not as a fixed view, but as a place shaped by weather, commerce and time. It is a photograph of distance, but also of construction.
Image:
Detail of John Chiara, Bay Panel, 2020 © John Chiara