Erin Eberle is a multi-disciplinary artist working across photography, ceramics and painting, exploring memory, place, and perception as sites of inquiry and devotion. Her practice is rooted in sustained attention—an invitation to slow down, to listen, and to encounter the subtle currents that shape inner and outer landscapes.
Through photography, Erin examines domestic and intimate spaces as vessels of memory and transformation. Her series Memory of Place reflects on how environments absorb lived experience—grief, tenderness, rupture, and repair—rendered through light, texture, and quiet presence. In painting, she approaches the canvas as a meditative field. Works from her ongoing body Glimpse of Boundlessness draw on abstraction, gesture, and layered color to dissolve fixed forms and invite viewers into states of not-knowing, where sensation precedes narrative and meaning emerges through feeling.
Erin’s process embraces multiplicity and experimentation. She works across raw canvas, heavy paper, watercolor, acrylic, and gouache, applying pigment with brushes, sticks, and hands. This tactile range is integral to her inquiry: how different materials carry different kinds of intelligence, and how uncertainty itself can become a generative force.
Influenced by contemplative practice, ecological thinking, and deep engagement with land and systems, Erin’s work reflects a lifelong interest in interconnectedness—how personal interiority mirrors collective and planetary rhythms. Her practice is less about representation than resonance, offering spaces where viewers may pause, breathe, and glimpse what lies beneath habit and form.
Erin Eberle lives and works in the United States. Her work has been exhibited in intimate gallery settings and continues to evolve as a dialogue between perception, presence, and place.