David Fokos
Sonoma Coast I, Sonoma County, California, 2018
archival pigment print
ed. of 50
Fokos088
David Fokos
Sonoma Coast II, Sonoma County, California, 2018
archival pigment print
ed. of 50
Fokos089
David Fokos
Sonoma Coast III, Sonoma County, California, 2018
archival pigment print
ed. of 50
Fokos090
David Fokos
Jetty, Oak Bluffs, Massachusetts 2001, 2001
archival pigment print
48h x 48w in
ed. 50
DF019
David Fokos
Solar Eclipse II - June 10, 2002, San Diego, California 2002, 2002
archival pigment print
36h x 36w in
ed. 50
DF005
David Fokos
Two Rocks, Study #2, Chilmark, Massachusetts 1995, 1995
archival pigment print
48h x 48w in
ed. 50
DF015
David Fokos
Mooring Rings, Study #3, Boston, Massachusetts 1997, 1997
archival pigment print
36h x 36w in
ed. 50
DF002
David Fokos
Cat Harbor, Catalina Island, California 2016, 2016
archival pigment print
ed. of 50
Fokos011
David Fokos
East Meets West, Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts 2009, 2009
archival pigment print
36h x 36w in
ed. 50
DF016
David Fokos
Stonewall II, Chilmark, Massachusetts, 2015
archival pigment print
36h x 36w in
ed. 50
DF039
David Fokos
The Sentinel, Chilmark, Massachusetts, 2015
archival pigment print
36h x 36w in
ed. 50
DF040
David Fokos
Stonewall I, Chilmark, Massachusetts 2015, 2015
archival pigment print
ed. of 50
Fokos070
David Fokos
Homage to Rothko, Oak Bluffs, Massachusetts 2016, 2016
archival pigment print
ed. of 50
Fokos034
David Fokos
Shark Tooth Cliff, Chilmark, Massachusetts 1995, 1995
archival pigment print
13 x 13 inches, matted at 22 x 26 inches
Framed: 27h x 23w x 2d in
ed. 50
DF024
David Fokos
Painted Rocks, North Tisbury, Massachusetts, 2003
archival pigment print
36h x 36w in
ed. 50
DF036
David Fokos
Balanced Stones, Port Townsend, Washington 2002, 2002
archival pigment print
13 x 13 inches, matted at 22 x 26 inches
ed. 50
DF025
David Fokos
Moonrise Over Lucy Vincent Beach, Chilmark, Massachusetts 1995, 1995
archival pigment print
36h x 80w in
ed. of 50
David Fokos was born in Baltimore, Maryland in 1960 and went on to receive his Bachelor of engineering from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. Fokos creates photographs of land and seascapes that evoke tranquility and emanate light with a concentration on capturing the feeling and emotion of a location, rather than documenting precise imagery.
At Cornell, Fokos studied Japanese art history, film, and poetry, and, while he does not specifically set out to render traditional haiku concepts in photographic form, there is a noticeable tie-in of Japanese aesthetic tradition evident in the grace, stillness, and simplicity of each piece. “With my work, I’m not trying to show the viewer what these places look like, but rather what they feel like... I have been greatly inspired by the haiku poet’s ability to convey deeply felt sentiment through a minimal number of words... I feel that the spirit expressed in these concepts resonates within my images.” -D. Fokos
Fokos’ multistep process is compulsory for his product. While many people consider photography a swift medium, Fokos labors over each image and adds only three to four new photographs to his portfolio each year. Fokos solely works with a large- format 8 x 10 Korona View camera from the 1920’s and uses long exposures lasting from 20 seconds to 60 minutes. After developing the film and selecting the best photographs, he then scans the images into his computer and often spends over 100 hours fine-tuning each element. Then, the final selection of works for his portfolio is made.
David Fokos regularly exhibits across the United States and in Japan, Russia, and Switzerland among other countries abroad. His work is frequently published and is also included in the collections of: Banana Republic, Microsoft, Texaco Corporation, McGraw- Hill, the Museum of Fine Art, Houston, the Museum of Photographic Art in San Diego, and the Boise Art Museum, among others.