From the days that are gone. 


A collection of objects, books, furniture, and art gathered during a summer wandering the backroads of the Pacific Northwest. Through a critical regional lens, Findings examines the raw hardpan layers of humanity and history that lie beneath the technotopian clouds of our present. 


Hours



12/20/25-12/23/25 
11am to 5pm
12/24/25
9am to 5pm


Bianco Gallery 
999 3rd Ave, 
Upper Jewel Box 
Seattle WA, 98104
ObjectFindings :


From the days that are gone. 


A collection of objects, books, furniture, and art gathered during a summer wandering the backroads of the Pacific Northwest. Through a critical regional lens, Findings examines the raw hardpan layers of humanity and history that lie beneath the technotopian clouds of our present. 

Mount St. Helens Exploding
Folded Card

$ 8






The Horror, and the beauty. On May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens in Washington erupted catastrophically, producing a massive lateral blast that leveled forests, sent ash across several states, and caused 57 deaths. The eruption was preceded by weeks of seismic activity and a bulging north flank, and it remains one of the most significant volcanic events in U.S. history.


SS Princess May on the Rocks
Folded Card

$ 8













The SS Princess May was a Canadian Pacific Railway coastal steamer that ran aground on August 5, 1910, near the north end of Sentinel Island in Alaska's Lynn Canal. Departing from Skagway, Alaska, with 80 passengers, 68 crew members, and a shipment of gold, the vessel encountered dense fog while traveling at approximately 12 knots. At around 4:00 AM, the ship struck submerged rocks, causing the hull to breach and flood the engine room. Despite the flooding, wireless operator W.R. Keller managed to send a distress signal using an improvised power source before the ship's electrical systems failed. The crew and passengers were safely evacuated, and the ship remained stranded until September 3, 1910, when salvage efforts successfully refloated it. 


King Crab Leg
Folded Card

$ 8










King crab legs are a celebrated delicacy closely tied to the waters of the North Pacific, and they hold a special place in the culinary culture of the Pacific Northwest and Seattle. Harvested primarily in the frigid Bering Sea, these crustaceans are known for their massive size and sweet, tender meat, which can fetch high prices in local markets and restaurants. Interestingly, king crabs are not true crabs but belong to a group called lithodids, and their populations can fluctuate dramatically due to changes in ocean temperatures and predator-prey dynamics, making each season unpredictable.


Mt Rainer Portal
Folded Card

$ 8















Mount Rainier rises majestically over the Puget Sound region as both a geological wonder and a cultural symbol of the Pacific Northwest. Formed over the past half-million years, this stratovolcano is built from layers of lava, ash, and glacial ice, and it remains an active volcano with a history of eruptions that have shaped the surrounding valleys and rivers. Its massive glaciers, including some of the largest in the contiguous United States, carve the mountain’s slopes and feed the region’s waterways, creating a dynamic landscape that has long fascinated geologists and explorers alike. For those returning to the region, Rainier becomes more than a natural landmark; it is a beacon on the horizon, a portal of recognition and belonging that signals the transition from the wider world into the distinct, luminous realm of the Pacific Northwest.


Haida Orca Whale
Clarence Mills


$ 25




Haida Skaana Orca Whale by Clarence Mills is a work in the Haida tradition. Mills, a world renowned Haida artist, creates designs rooted in the ancient art of his people, reflecting the enduring strength and style of Northwest Coast artwork.


Various Positions
Folded Card

$ 8







In multiple exposure photography, a single object can appear in several positions simultaneously within a single frame. Physically, it occupies only one point in space, yet the image collapses time and movement into a single moment. Like a quantum particle in superposition, the rock seems to exist in multiple states simultaneously, challenging our sense of reality and perception.


Total Eclipse folding card. 

$9









Totality photographed in Oregon on August 21st, 2017. If you want to avoid experiencing the grandeur of an eclipse, spend your precious seconds hunched over a camera, adjusting things. It’s great to hear the awe-inspiring gasps of your friends as they take in the astonishing phenomenon which has captivated humanity since its inception while you fuck around with a plastic mechanical device to make a 2-dimensional image that will soon be readily available by thousands of other people who did the same thing.



A Drop in the Pond
Folded Card

$ 8
















This photograph captures the delicate aftermath of a single rock striking the surface of a pond. In this brief interval, the rock has already broken the surface tension and disappeared beneath the water, leaving behind a series of expanding concentric ripples. Mechanically, the energy transferred from the rock into the water propagates outward as surface waves, with molecules oscillating vertically while the wave itself moves horizontally. The water is in a state of transient equilibrium as kinetic energy from the initial disturbance disperses, interacting with the pond’s natural viscosity and surface tension, which gradually dampens the wave amplitude. Tiny vortices and subtle reflections along the ripple crests hint at the turbulent microcurrents still swirling below. This photograph essentially captures a moment where order and chaos coexist, revealing the fluid dynamics in a quiet, almost meditative instant.


Ode to the Umbrella
Folded Card

$ 8




An ode to the common umbrella which has died for our sins. Like the time you took fur suede shoes out into the cyclone. We sing for you now, oh brave and beautiful umbrella!


Nobuo Kitagaki
Mixed Media

$1500



















Nobuo Kitagaki (1918–1984) was a Japanese-American artist known for his minimalist geometric collages that fused Japanese design principles with mid-century modern aesthetics. Interned with his family during World War II, he later studied at the Chicago Institute of Design, where Bauhaus influences shaped his work. Settling in San Francisco, Kitagaki became part of the city’s vibrant postwar art scene, creating collages, shoji screens, and other works celebrated for their serene, reductive style, which combined elements of the East and West. In his later years in Portland, Oregon, his art resonated with the Pacific Northwest’s appreciation for simplicity, natural form, and contemplative design. Now seldom seen on the market, his works remain rare treasures for collectors.