LEAF LITTER

This show will be focused around nature, the small parts of it, the moving parts of it, the less appreciated parts of nature. We are working with a lot of stellar artists

LEAF LITTER gathers what the eye forgets. This exhibition turns toward the small, the obscure, and the nearly-absent—textures at the edge of paths, the undersides of things, the places weather leaves its handwriting. Through photography that peers into occluded scenes, paintings that hold the presence of stones, twigs, seedpods, and salt-scorched leaves, and works that translate raw emotion into weather systems of line and color, the show asks what beauty becomes when it is no longer central, and how attention can be an act of repair.

Cyanotypes anchor the exhibition like pressed shadows, sunlight fixing silhouettes the way memory fixes a feeling just after it passes. Abalone shells bring tidal iridescence—a reminder that the world’s shimmer lives inside what once sheltered a soft body. Across media, surfaces blur and sharpen: a veil of branches, a smudge of rain, a pulse of blue. These works do not scale nature up to meet us; instead, they invite us to kneel, to listen for the quiet click of a seed releasing, to notice how weather moves first through the nervous system and only then across the sky.

LEAF LITTER is a field guide to the overlooked. It proposes that the fragile and the fallen are not remnants but records: of breath, of storm, of time’s mineral patience. To walk through this exhibition is to practice a smaller seeing—one that makes space for tenderness, for tremor, and for the radiant ord

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