Pinhole Rocks brings together lensless photography and drawing to contemplate the weight and presence of stone. The images begin as 4 x 5 pinhole film exposures, a process that favors long durations, softened edges, and an expanded sense of time. Each print is then worked over with graphite and ink, inscribing and erasing forms, allowing the rocks to exist in a liminal space between documentation and drawing, observation and recollection