Ari Salomon: Fine Art Photography

Ari Salomon Fine Art Photography

  • About
    • About Ari
    • Resume / CV
    • Newsletter
    • Purchase
  • Projects
    • Burn Line
    • 6 Feet Apart
    • Rapid Express
    • Panoramas
    • Interface
    • Motion Studies
    • 18 Rue Dugommier
    • Human Futures
  • News
  • Contact
  • Burn Line
  • 6 Feet Apart
  • Interface
  • more…
    • Rapid Express
    • Motion Studies
    • Panoramas
    • 18 Rue Dugommier
    • Human Futures
December 15, 2025

Burn Line featured in Forbes and J

Press: On Fire, Memory, and an Evolving Process

Forbes: California Wildfires Give Rise To New Artistic Process Forged By Flame
By Leslie Katz

A feature-length article about my project. View PDF


J Weekly: Wildfires, tides, landlines: A Jewish artists’ laboratory grapples with change 

An article that includes all the artists in the exhibition at the Magnes. View PDF


Burn Line Featured in Forbes: On Fire, Memory, and an Evolving Process

I’m grateful to share that Forbes recently published a feature on my ongoing project Burn Line, focusing on the process I’ve been developing over the past year and the stories embedded in these works. The article looks closely at what I call pyrotypes—charcoal images created by engraving photographs into wood and then transforming that wood through controlled burning—and situates the work within a broader conversation about art, wildfire, and transformation.

What I appreciate most about the piece is that it does not treat the work simply as an object or aesthetic outcome, but as a process shaped by collaboration, loss, and experimentation. The article traces how each Burn Line piece begins with a photograph of an object damaged or destroyed in a Southern California wildfire—items that once carried daily, ritual, or deeply personal meaning. Through carving and fire, those images become something materially altered: neither photograph nor sculpture alone, but a hybrid artifact forged by the same elemental force that caused the loss.

The article highlights one specific work, Lost Terra-Cotta Bust, which is based on clay sculptures recovered from the burned home of my friend Robin Wallace’s family in Ventura County. Her reflections—on standing in the debris, on the strange dignity and resilience of what remains—mirror many of the conversations I’ve had with people who have lived through fire. In that sense, the project is as much about listening as it is about making. The resulting charcoal pieces function as both images and relics, carrying forward memory while acknowledging irreversible change.




There is also a practical transparency in the article that feels important to me. It walks through the technical steps of the process—from image preparation and CNC carving to carbonization in a low-oxygen environment—underscoring that this work is still evolving. I see Burn Line not as a fixed technique but as an ongoing set of experiments: testing materials, burn durations, tools, and contexts in order to better understand how fire can function as both subject and collaborator.

Finally, the article situates Burn Line within a larger ecosystem of artistic responses to wildfire devastation, including exhibitions that treat burned objects as historical artifacts rather than debris. That framing aligns closely with my intentions. These works are not about recovery in a sentimental sense; they are about what persists, what changes, and how meaning is reshaped when utility is stripped away.

I’m thankful for the care with which this article engages the work, and for the opportunity it creates to share Burn Line as an ongoing inquiry—into fire, memory, and the fragile line between destruction and transformation.


Burn Line Featured in J. Weekly  

I’m also honored to be included in a recent J. The Jewish News of Northern California article covering LABA Bay Area’s 2025 fellows and this year’s theme of change. The piece highlights one of my Burn Line works—a charcoal image of a menorah based on a ritual object damaged in the recent Southern California wildfires—and places it within a larger conversation about how artists are responding to loss, displacement, and transformation.

The article describes the process behind the work: engraving a photograph into wood and then converting that wood into charcoal through controlled burning. What I appreciate about the coverage is its attention to how the material process mirrors the subject itself—objects altered by fire becoming artworks literally forged by fire. The menorah piece, in particular, is discussed in relation to Jewish ritual, memory, and resilience, and is linked to the biblical image of the burning bush that is aflame yet not consumed.

The article also situates Burn Line within the broader LABA framework, where ancient Jewish texts are used not as prescriptions but as catalysts—fertilizing contemporary artistic responses to the present moment. It was meaningful to see the work contextualized alongside such a wide range of practices, from performance and film to interactive installations, all grappling with different facets of change.




Burn Line Exhibitions

  • Change at The Magnes
  • Ephemeral Earth at Alameda Photo Festival

Related

Publish date: December 15, 2025
Posted in Press. RSS 2.0 feed.
« Change at the Magnes Collection
A Measure of Uncertainty at Harvey Milk Photo Center »
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Ari Salomon is a fine art photographer working in San Francisco.

Current and Upcoming Exhibitions

  • A Measure of Uncertainty at Harvey Milk Photo Center

    1/17 – 2/21, Opening 1/17 2-5pm

Recent Exhibitions

  • Change at the Magnes Collection
  • Pingyao International Photography Festival
  • SF Photobook Fair
  • Ephemeral Earth at Alameda Photo Festival
  • Startup Art Fair @ Hotel del Sol

Recent Press

  • Lasting Evidence: featured in Professional Photographer magazine
  • Float Magazine Instagram Takeover
  • Fraction Magazine 15th Anniversary Selections

Newsletter

Get occasional updates on my exhibitions.
Newsletter archive

Current and Upcoming Exhibitions

  • A Measure of Uncertainty at Harvey Milk Photo Center

    1/17 – 2/21, Opening 1/17 2-5pm

Instagram

Great show @la_centerofphoto in downtown LA. “Rese Great show @la_centerofphoto in downtown LA. “Reservoir”, a new photographic “generator” (mentorship project) offers a shared repository of responses to the global crisis of loneliness through visual storytelling. Over 40 artists and mentors that represent a wide array of geographies, approaches, ages, nationalities and lived experiences participated.

@lynnebreitfellerphoto 
@atelierlemay 
@jabuteuxphotography 
@chungpingchengphotography 
@cathy_cone 
@daellisphoto 
@allyson.ely.photo 
@nancyfarese 
@lesliegleim 
@bootsyholler 
@rohinaphoto 
@valeriehorvathphoto 
@sandra_klein_photography 
@dianemeyerstudio 
@joanmorsephotography 
@lwsclydehill 
@livmakeswork 
@jacquerupp 
@livmakeswork
Still my favorite tower Still my favorite tower
Some highlights today from @minnesotastreetproject Some highlights today from @minnesotastreetproject and their new atrium art fair. It’s a great selection of small galleries that add to the resident galleries and make for a amazing afternoon of local and regional art.
Great opening today. Thanks @mcphotography @harvey Great opening today. Thanks @mcphotography @harveymilkphoto @bapcsf  By the way, we have a second event coming up next weekend: Meet the Artists: Saturday January 24, 1:00pm to 4:00pm
featuring:  Chad Amory, Timofey Glinin, Shelley Hodes, Mitch Nelles, Angelika Schilli, Anastasia Shubina, Cindy Stokes, Alison Taggart-Barone and me!
@quelquefoisphoto has an amazing exhibition of pho @quelquefoisphoto has an amazing exhibition of photographs, and risograph images of African-American modernist architecture
A Measure of Uncertainty at Harvey Milk Photo Cent A Measure of Uncertainty at Harvey Milk Photo Center

1/17 – 2/21, Opening 1/17 2-5pm...

https://arisalomon.com/exhibitions/a-measure-of-uncertainty-at-harvey-milk-photo-center/
Opening: Sat, Jan. 17, 2–5 PM Exhibition Dates: Ja Opening: Sat, Jan. 17, 2–5 PM
Exhibition Dates: Jan. 17 – Feb. 21, 2026
Meet the Artists: Sat Jan. 24, 1–4 PM
Location: Harvey Milk Photo Center, San Francisco

“The BAPC artists employ a range of artistic approaches to tap into photography’s unique relationship with both truth and fiction, from straight documentation to juxtaposition, intervention, and fabrication. Together, their work creates a chorus of photographic perspectives exploring the edges of meaning, inviting open-ended interpretation, and moving in tandem towards the sublime.”
— Curatorial Statement by Heather Snider

In Frame: one of the Pyrotype (charcoal) photographs I will exhibit. 

#bapcsf #harveymilkphotocenter #sanfranciscoart #sanfranciscophotographer #bayareaphotography
These photographs are part of Burn Line, presented These photographs are part of Burn Line, presented alongside the pyrotypes.

While Burn Line often focuses on small, personal objects-items carried, used, and held-Lost Landscapes widens the frame. These images offer grounding and scale: the places where fire moved through land, homes, and neighborhoods. They provide context for the objects by showing the environments that shaped, and were altered by, the same events.

All of these landscape photographs were made by me, on site.
Shown together with the charcoal works, they create a dialogue between the intimate and the expansive, the relic and the terrain-between what was carried away and what remains.
#BurnLine #LostLandscapes #WildfireAftermath #PhotographyAndFire #MemoryAndPlace
Lost Landscapes 
These photographs are part of Bur Lost Landscapes

These photographs are part of Burn Line, presented alongside the pyrotypes.

While Burn Line often focuses on small, personal objects—items carried, used, and held—Lost Landscapes widens the frame. These images offer grounding and scale: the places where fire moved through land, homes, and neighborhoods. They provide context for the objects by showing the environments that shaped, and were altered by, the same events.

All of these landscape photographs were made by me, on site. Shown together with the charcoal works, they create a dialogue between the intimate and the expansive, the relic and the terrain—between what was carried away and what remains.
#BurnLine #LostLandscapes #WildfireAftermath #PhotographyAndFire #MemoryAndPlace
Follow on Instagram

Connect

Facebook Tumblr Twitter YouTube Instagram BlueSky

 

Ari Salomon Fine Art Photography

Check out my books

©2026 Ari Salomon. Contact. Search.

Design by WordPress expert HelloARI and Performsites WordPress websites for artists.
 

Loading Comments...
 

    • 1/17 📷A Measure of Uncertainty @ Harvey Milk Photo Center