Meghann Riepenhoff
Born 1979 in Atlanta, USA.
Lives and works in Bainbridge Island, USA.
Meghann Riepenhoff received a BFA in Photography from the University of Georgia and an MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute, and was named a Guggenheim Fellow in 2018. Her work has been exhibited internationally at institutions including SFMOMA, the High Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, C/O Berlin, Centre Photographique d’Île-de-France, Centre d’art contemporain de l’Onde, Galerie du Monde, and the Photographers’ Gallery, London.
Her work is held in major collections including the Getty, the National Gallery, and Harvard Art Museums. She has published two monographs, Littoral Drift + Ecotone and Ice, the latter named a Top 10 Photography Book of 2022 by Smithsonian Magazine.
My earliest memories are from the shore, where water and land met and moved each other. The sea seemed beautiful and dangerous, vast, and yet intimately connected to my very being. Before I knew I was made of water, water seemed to know me. I now work collaboratively with the environment, making dynamic cameraless cyanotypes through direct contact with the elements. Each piece is a fingerprint of time, place, wildness, and conditions.
This exhibition, Upwelling, considers the complex nature of our relationships to the landscape, the sublime, time, and impermanence. An Upwelling is both an essential oceanic process that renews ecosystems, and a term used to describe a growing emotional or political momentum.
The exhibition includes pieces from five series: Waters of the Americas works with bodies of water impacted by human interventions; Ecotone collaborates with precipitation in both built and unbuilt topographies; Chronographs are exhibition‑specific books that expose one page per day of the show; Adaptive Radiation is made with ecosystems most impacted by the United States’ nuclear legacy; State Shift includes work I made during the two years my family was displaced after a climate event destroyed our home.
The work in Upwelling examines the profound ways humans are shaping our collective environment as our environment shapes us. Sites include a former plutonium mine that is now the most contaminated area in the US; Utah’s Great Salt Lake when its water levels were the lowest in recorded history; and a river in Sun Valley, Idaho that was contaminated by the mining of the same silver that has been an essential part of photography for over a century.
Several pieces also include fungi ink, resulting in prints that have regenerative, bioremediative properties. Even as water, our most essential resource, warns us that our current path is unsustainable, the prints become gestures of connection, hope, and repair.
Meghann Riepenhoff
Venue
Cloître Saint-Trophime
Exhibition produced by the Rencontres d’Arles.
In collaboration with Yossi Milo Gallery.
Framing
Circad, Paris
Practical Information
Festival dates: July 6 July – October 4, 2026
Opening Week: 6–12 July, 2026
All-exhibitions pass: €42 (reduced: €33)
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