Joni Sternbach: Surfboard at Joseph Bellows Gallery turns the surfboard into a subject with weight, memory and presence. On view from June 27 to August 29, 2026, the exhibition presents twenty 14 x 11-inch gelatin silver contact prints made from glass-plate collodion negatives, bringing a 19th-century process to an object firmly rooted in contemporary surf culture.
Sternbach is best known for her tintype portraits of surfers, and here she applies the same historical method to the boards themselves. The results are direct and closely observed. Each surfboard appears as a shaped object marked by craftsmanship, use and the ocean’s slow effect on its surface. Scratches, repairs, wax residue and hand-shaped contours remain visible, giving the photographs the feel of portraits rather than product images.
The choice of wet plate collodion matters as much as the subject. Its chemistry alters what the eye can register, emphasizing certain tones while softening others, and that shift gives the boards an almost archaeological clarity. Sternbach’s process strips away the surrounding context and isolates the board as an artifact of labor and devotion. In that setting, the surfboard reads not only as sporting equipment but also as a sculptural form shaped by movement, touch and time.
The work also extends Sternbach’s long interest in the links between landscape, identity and photographic history. Her images sit between documentation and typology, balancing precision with a sense of reverence. Seen together, the boards form a quiet survey of American vernacular design, where function, style and memory remain inseparable.
By using one of photography’s oldest techniques to describe an object defined by motion and modern leisure, Sternbach gives the surfboard a slower, more reflective life. The photographs hold that tension clearly: they are tactile, formal and steeped in history, yet they remain tied to the beach, the rider and the culture that formed them.
Image:
© Joni Sternbach. Courtesy of the Joseph Bellows Gallery