I’m glad that you’ve come to learn more about my series on landscape change in San Francisco.
Please find all paintings below with detailed descriptions, and my statement on the works underneath.
Use the arrows to navigate between paintings.
Artist Statement
When was the last time you considered the past life of the land beneath your feet?
Or it’s future?
Do you consider the appearance of the landscapes you encounter daily as static, or as an ever-evolving canvas, reflecting our relationship with the land?
How do you relate to the Earth that sustains us?
With “Ever-changing: A Story of San Francisco and its People,” I take my curiosity of “what was before?” and “what might be?,” and visualize it. For three different locations on the peninsula, I paint the landscape as it likely appeared in 1700 and 1900, its current state today (2025), and a possibility for the distant future (2500).
As you view the pieces, take some moments to notice what emotions you experience.
Loss? Grief? Hope? Fear? Unease? Gratitude?
What about the paintings make you feel that way?
The alterations to the landscape speak for themselves, showing us how a place can change at the hands of humans. And while these changes since colonization have been predominantly harmful to the health of the Earth and its intertwined systems, I believe that the scale of haphazard development illustrates a similar capacity for intentional restoration.
We have in our hands the capability to build a future presence on this Earth that reflects values of sustainability, reciprocity, and respect, when we internalize that we are an extension of the land, not separate.
For the paintings set in 2500, I don’t expect you to agree with my vision. I often have difficulty holding hope for an optimistic future, considering the challenges we currently face and the trajectory our elected officials and corporate lords seem determined to force upon us, especially now. It has been the teachings of dear professors, and the writings of cultural visionaries, that have opened my world and influenced my perspective – Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass is particularly potent in my conscience.
With encouragement from these inspiring teachers, I challenged myself to imagine a future where we “get it right” (see Ayana Elizabeth Johnson) — where we build inland from rising seas, share collaborative and collective housing, concentrate our impact on the Earth to a smaller footprint, and live with a reciprocal relationship to the land and the other beings of this Earth. While these painted visions present one of many possible outcomes, and are of my own imagination, it is my hope that the efforts toward our future presence on this Earth are led by Indigenous communities and those who share similar worldviews. Locally, that includes the first stewards of San Francisco, the Ramaytush Ohlone, who have tended to this place for millennia. To achieve this vision requires structural transformation, including to our economic system. And, prerequisite and perhaps most importantly, there must be a cultural shift toward collectivism and reciprocity with the Earth — a task toward which this collection of work aims to contribute. Certainly the visions laid out here for the future are idealistic, and yet I believe that we must hold a vision of hope if we wish to make a change in that direction.
What feelings come up when you consider these future visions?
Spend some time to ponder what “getting it right” means to you.
I could have included more snapshots in time, either before 1700 (showing geological change and the shaping of land by the indigenous Ramaytush Ohlone), or intermediate steps (showing a more continuous picture of development by colonizers). I selected these dates for my own capacity as an artist, and to best illustrate the drama of the most significant changes. Indigenous stewards of the land certainly changed the landscape, through burning practices, shellmounds, and their village sites. The scale of these changes are not obvious on the scale of my paintings, and simultaneously illustrate one of my intended sentiments – that these minglings with the land were not crudely violent, nor to the scale of those wrought by the Spanish, Mexican, nor the continued legacy of American settler-colonists.
Change is inherent. There is no stasis within ourselves, nor the extended world around us. May we recognize these transformations and acknowledge our capacity to change for better. At the root of this aspiration for an intentional relationship to land, is the necessity of paying attention.
With viewing this series, it is my hope that you may begin, or continue to, pay attention to changes in the world around you. As Kimmerer beautifully writes, “paying attention is a form of reciprocity with the living world, receiving the gifts with open eyes and an open heart.”
On Sources: The 1700 and 1900 scenes were painted with intentional effort to adhere to historical accuracy, in consultation with historical surveys, maps, and photographs. The photo archives available at opensfhistory.org were particularly helpful in this effort of historical visualization. Imaginings of the 1700 landscapes were assisted by a publicly available map: Hidden Nature SF, crafted by the San Francisco Estuary Institute.
