Kathy Fridstein
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Current Projects / Stone People
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Stone People

Stone people build on my interest in symbolic forms, from petroglyphs to ancient menhirs and stone circles, to dwellings of ancient civilizations. Each culture develops a mythology with which to understand its environment. Stones are sacred symbols of cohesion and stability with a life-giving potency. In many ancient myths, as well as some scientific theories, life originates from stones. 

I have photographed ancient ruins from different cultures, including Anasazi, Mayan, Aztec, Greek and Roman. I often merge elements from these disparate cultures into a single symbolic image, a “stone person”.  My crafted ”stone people” suggest a harmonious and stable global community. Sadly, racial and ethnic injustice still presides in our world, perhaps even more now than in the past.

These images are printed large to emphasize the symbolic strength and unity of “stone people”.

1 / 7

Contemporary Photography by the Print Night Photographers, Grover Gallery, Port Townsend, WA, Juried Group Exhibition, 2021

2 / 7

Chaco Person, Silver Print, Acrylic, Charcoal, 63″ x 29″, 1994

3 / 7

Stone Person,#1, Archival Pigment Print, 1997

4 / 7

Eracela Minoa, Archival Pigment Print, 2020

5 / 7

Maya, Archival Pigment Print, 1997

6 / 7

Mitla, Archival Pigment Print, 2008

7 / 7

Galisteo, Silver Print, Pastel, 36″ x 36″, 1995

Stone people build on my interest in symbolic forms, from petroglyphs to ancient menhirs and stone circles, to dwellings of ancient civilizations. Each culture develops a mythology with which to understand its environment. Stones are sacred symbols of cohesion and stability with a life-giving potency. In many ancient myths, as well as some scientific theories, life originates from stones. 

I have photographed ancient ruins from different cultures, including Anasazi, Mayan, Aztec, Greek and Roman. I often merge elements from these disparate cultures into a single symbolic image, a “stone person”.  My crafted ”stone people” suggest a harmonious and stable global community. Sadly, racial and ethnic injustice still presides in our world, perhaps even more now than in the past.

These images are printed large to emphasize the symbolic strength and unity of “stone people”.

Contemporary Photography by the Print Night Photographers, Grover Gallery, Port Townsend, WA, Juried Group Exhibition, 2021

Chaco Person, Silver Print, Acrylic, Charcoal, 63″ x 29″, 1994

Stone Person,#1, Archival Pigment Print, 1997

Eracela Minoa, Archival Pigment Print, 2020

Maya, Archival Pigment Print, 1997

Mitla, Archival Pigment Print, 2008

Galisteo, Silver Print, Pastel, 36″ x 36″, 1995

Copyright 2025 Kathy Fridstein.  All Rights Reserved