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Indian Hill Imageworks The Studio of EveNSteve

The Architecture of Memory

Indian Hill Imageworks is housed within a three-story, 1790s sheep barn in the Mettawee Valley of Pawlet, Vermont. Originally built during the "Merino Boom" when Vermont was the center of the world’s wool trade, the structure was designed to hold the physical wealth of the land. Today, it serves as the laboratory and primary gallery for EveNSteve.

In 2001, we reclaimed the barn to function as an independent cultural institution: transforming from a place of agriculture to a place of "Psychic Terroir." Just as the barn once preserved the harvest, it now preserves the narratives, experimental optics, and cinematic experiments of our collaboration.

A Modern Laboratory

The studio is divided into two distinct operational wings:

The Gallery: A monumental viewing space that occupies two floors which allows our large-format works to "breathe," providing the quiet and scale necessary to experience the works of EveNSteve.

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The Lab: Where Stephen’s "Figital" process (the fusion of specialized analog film and modern digital precision) meets Eve’s handwritten narrative scribing.


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The Independent Mission

Indian Hill Imageworks is a destination for the "Independent Mind." By maintaining our own gallery, we ensure that every one of a kind artwork—from the salt-washed memories of our Cape Cod artworks to the historic narratives of Vermont, Scotland and beyond is experienced exactly as intended.