Join seven artists as they show lens-based work on place, time, and nature. With an installation of sculptures, prints, and film, explore and question the convergence of inner and outer worlds in a private studio space with a three acre woodland art trail.
Chika Kobari
I’m interested in liminal, ineffable spaces where the body, the earth, and the cosmos feel intertwined, and where personal loss becomes a portal into something larger than trauma—toward awe, the unknown, and the possibility of transcendence.
I focus on moments where experience becomes fragmented and meaning remains unstable. By working within the tension between presence and absence, the work resists resolution and invites sustained reflection rather than closure.
Website: chikakobari.com
IG: @chika_kobari
Ikechukwu Sharpe
My interdisciplinary practice utilizes photography, moving image, and sound to express the profound interconnectedness and rhythms of our more-than-human world. Through a meditative and intentional process, my artworks explore regenerative forms of ecological care, focusing on renewing the spiritual legacy and ancestral kinship Black communities hold with earth.
Website: ikechukwusharpe.com/
IG: @ikechukwusharpe
Jody E. Borhani-D’Amico
My artwork takes you on an adventure, a fantasy rooted in unseen burdens. I merge photography and painting in ethereal, intricate and narrative layers. I invoke places now decayed that hold a sense of pain, longing and purpose for us. I capture the complexity of history that saturates these places, that we carry within ourselves. History makes its demands and I try to meet them. In doing so I hope I make room for you in this world.
87 89 91
Right now, today, this world is on fire and we are in it. It is flooding and we are drowning. We gas up, we take the open road, we hear that engine— is it ours, or the one to shatter the sky?
Comprising four monumental photo-paint scrolls, 87 89 91 is both globally warmed nightmare and polemic about our oil wars, connected to family history in a petrostate.
Website: jodyborhanidamico.com
John D’Amico
I am a writer and sometimes filmmaker who has captured stories of loss, environmental collapse, and human culture in places as varied as Northern Alaska, the Mexican border, and southern France.
Green Brothers
Green Brothers is a long-lost document. A decade ago, this film shot in a livewire hand-held style charted a violent, tender story of cryptocurrency, crime, and brotherhood in the middle of the Bronx. It saw how the nation was beginning to fray into pointless cycles of violence and constant scams. After screening in London and Manhattan, the money ran out and everyone had to get day jobs. This dark crime thriller has not screened anywhere since 2017.
Kevin Hayes and Matthew Capers
Kevin Hayes is a journalist. Matthew Capers is an artist. This is their first collaboration.
This Is Not A Nature Documentary
The Hudson River Valley is an area of extraordinary natural beauty, and also one of the most developed places on the planet. "This Is Not A Nature Documentary" is a closely observed, slow-moving meditation on this, images and soundtrack reflecting the intersection of landscape and infrastructure, artificial and natural.
Seth Britton
Transforming imagery into sculptural installation, I portray a reckoning with the past; a sense of self is stretched across glass and aluminum forms, and that sense of self must be confronted repetitively. This work loosely touches on addiction, alcoholism, and recovery.
Website: sethbritton.com
instagram: @SethsterB
and Sean Blocklin