sculptural photography

"Confluence" exhibition speaks to our climate crisis through artists' innovative techniques and vision

The opening reception for my current exhibition Confluence: Reflections on Our Shifting Environment at the Marin Art and Garden Center (Ross, CA) was a blast – it’s always best to share the artwork with visitors in person!

The show features three artists - Arminee Chahbazian, Laura Corallo-Titus and myself – who bring awareness to our shifting environment, and our changing perceptions of it, through innovative techniques in drawing, painting, photography and sculpture.

The Confluence artists - Arminee Chahbazian, Laura Corallo-Titus and Cindy Stokes

The exhibition runs through August 28, so if you’re in the Bay Area I hope you’ll visit before then (details here)!

Here are some highlights from the reception and the exhibition generally - thanks to all who attended!


In the main gallery, my installation Close to Home anchors one end of the room. Developed specifically for this site, this installation considers the breadth of man’s relationship to fire - from romance to utility to threat. It incorporates images from family campfires and sketches made with ink ground from burned trees from the CZU complex fire near Big Basin. Together these are built into flames and embers rising high overhead, evocative of wildfire and reminding us of the ever-growing threat of them worldwide. The installation is approximately 25’ x 12’ x 2’, comprising pigment prints and charcoal drawings on paper with protective coatings, Reemay, magnets, and lighting.


Each of the artists gave a short talk describing the motivation and background of our work. I described the genesis of my Close to Home project - both the installation as well as the separate wall sculptures - based on my family campfires contrasted with the overwhelming San Francisco Bay Area wildfires of 2020 during COVID lockdowns.


In addition to the installation in the main gallery, I have a dozen wall sculptures made from my sculptural photographs of fire in the exhibition. These were variously inspired by ways we talk about fire and feelings evoked by the dynamic nature of flame itself. These pieces have names such as Fireline, Contained, Perpetual Motion, Imagining, and Breath.


Laura’s works are multi-media paintings that address the manner in which historic expectations of landscape painting have been hijacked by a more chaotic and disrupted visual conclusion.


Inspired by observations of natural phenomena, Arminée creates large multi-media imagery on paper to explore how recent environmental shifts modulate our desires for nature’s beauty and drama, leading to a sense of displacement. Her stone sculpture compositions on the table retain primal memory while offering narratives that shift with time, light and orientation, just as our own relationship to the earth does.


I so appreciate all who attended! Following are a few more gallery views from the day.

Taking pictures during one’s own reception is haphazard but I managed a selfie with friends from the Bay Area Photographers Collective (first picture) of which I’m a member.

And a special shoutout to Ann Trinca is owed (fourth picture, on the left), as she instigated this exhibition for the three of us with the Marin Art and Garden Center for its climate month theme.


To attend the exhibition, here are the details:

Confluence: Reflections on Our Shifting Environment

Laura Corallo-Titus, Cindy Stokes and Arminee Chahbazian, artists

The Studio at the Marin Art and Garden Center

30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Ross, CA

July 21-August 28

Hours: Thurs-Sat, 10 am - 4 pm, Sunday noon - 4 pm (call MAGC to arrange a different time)


To receive pictures and stories from my studio about work-in-progress, event invitations, etc., provide your email here.

From threat to comfort, Close to Home reflects on our relationship to fire

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The art installation Close to Home is my visual narrative on the breadth of man’s relationship with fire. Learning to use fire was central to the rise of civilization, yet fire in the wild also lives on, uncontrolled and increasingly threatening modern life.

Fire seasons worldwide continue to grow longer, hotter, more destructive and more deadly with each decade. In just the last decade, Bay Area wildfires have had devastating impacts on both man and the environment, burning entire towns and neighborhoods, thousands of structures, and millions of trees, killed hundreds of people and uncountable wildlife, and endangered us all with smoke and haze for months each year.

Similar scenarios are playing out worldwide, and man isn’t innocent in this growing threat. Our contributions to climate change, how we use land and natural resources, and where we choose to live all play a role in ever longer and more destructive fire seasons.

And still, the intimate flames of our campfires and fireplaces embody the very essence of comfort, family and friendship. Sharing stories and laughter around the fire pit are an early memory for many; stoking a fire on the hearth has fueled many a couple’s romance. More practically, we rely on combustion to fuel everything from heating and cooking to transportation and industry. Given this ubiquity, it’s not surprising that fire is a central symbol across religion, myth, literature and popular culture, variously representing passion and desire, purification and rebirth, destruction and punishment, or hope and eternity. 

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Close to Home speaks to these contradictory roles of fire in our lives. It is developed around my photographs of flames, sculpted into curving, gestural three-dimensional forms, that were made at family campfires and embody my memories of comfort, laughter and kinship. On the backs are gestural drawings made with homemade sumi ink ground from charred wood from the 2020 CZU complex fire. On a central structure, groups of these sculpted photographs are arranged, mosaic-like, into much larger formations to evoke the ascending flames and embers of forest wildfires.

In some areas and at different times of day, shadows are primarily visible, whispers of promise or threat…or perhaps nothing. Likewise, on most objects one side of the sculptural photograph is hidden.

In the contrasts of small and large, visible or implied, I’m asking the viewer to consider our multifaceted relationship with fire and the environment generally - how we use natural resources, where we live, and how we balance current desires with future disaster. Addressing such questions is essential for the future of both man and the natural world.

The exhibition is in the Art Kiosk at 2208 Broadway (on Courthouse Square) in Redwood City, CA from April 17-May 30, 2021. It is viewed through the windows on all sides of the building at any time of day. A variable light program runs after dark until 2 am.


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"Close to Home" for Redwood City's Art Kiosk is commissioned

In late 2020, I was commissioned to produce an art installation in Redwood City’s Art Kiosk right on the main square of its downtown. My installation “Close to Home” is a narrative on the breadth of man’s relationship with fire, and will be on exhibit from April 17 - May 30, 2021.

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