About the Book
in its opening, the first half of this book rolls out in twenty one spreads of heavy low tone black and white photography, before the single center spread actuates a transition to twenty two color spreads.
The black-and-white images belong to a world held in suspension—where endurance becomes habit and time thickens. They inhabit a space where repetition hardens into structure, where bodies persist not dramatically, but steadily.
The color images do not resolve what came before. They disturb it. They mark the return of sensation—the moment when what has been carried too long can no longer remain contained.
This is not a record of change accomplished, but of change becoming unavoidable.
A snake sheds its skin not because it is hopeful, but because remaining the same becomes lethal.
Color here is not optimism. It is exposure.
The book is not about darkness giving way to light.
It is about stasis giving way to volatility.
Change does not announce what it will become.
It only proves that remaining as we are is no longer possible.
Alma Sugar, 2026
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Coffee Table Books
- Additional Categories Fine Art Photography, Street Photography
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Project Option: Large Format Landscape, 13×11 in, 33×28 cm
# of Pages: 88 - Publish Date: Mar 12, 2026
- Language English
- Keywords portland, street photography, r.chorneau
About the Creator
r chorneau is an american painter and photographer born in los angeles in1952. self taught and formed as much by labor as art schools, working in boat yards, machine shops, and commercial fishing before devoting himself fully to painting and photography. his work moves between modernist street photography and deeply physical painting, shaped by shadow weather solitude and the dignity of ordinary life. over the last decade he produced thousands of photographs walking the streets of savannah and portland, building books that read as one long human document broken into fragments. living and working in portland with the painter, ruth hunter, he continues to make art outside fashion, careerism, and institutional permission, guided instead by endurance observation and the necessity of seeing.
