Where the World Breaks

Michel Angela Petersen, He Gong, Tom Sherwood, Thomas Wood, Susan Bennerstrom, & John Cole

Curated by Sophia Grace Kidd

June 6 - August 29, 2026

Opening Ceremony June 6, 2026 5 pm

Gallery Hours:

Open Tues–Sat, 4–9 PM via Leader Block Trattoria & Bar
Gallery Front Entrance on 2nd Street: Fri & Sat, 2–6 PM
Private curator tours and collector appointments
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Where the World Breaks Poster

WHERE THE WORLD BREAKS

Sophia Grace Gallery
June 6 – August 29, 2026
Opening Reception: Saturday, June 6, 2026 • 5:00 PM

Where the World Breaks examines the collapse of a shared world.

Bringing together contemporary artists He Gong and Michel Angela Petersen alongside Pacific Northwest Mystic painters Thomas Wood, Tom Sherwood, Susan Bennerstrom, and John Cole, the exhibition explores a seam in consciousness that once held human experience together and now appears to be fracturing.

The exhibition recontextualizes the Pacific Northwest Mystics through dialogue with contemporary art. In the works of the Northwest Mystics, nature emerges as a unified spiritual field grounded in interconnectedness and metaphysical depth. Bellingham-based British-American artist Michel Angela Petersen extends this tradition through paintings, ceramic sculpture, and ceramic bas-relief works informed by the semiotic systems of the occult, creating a bridge between regional traditions and international currents of mystical thought.

Chinese contemporary artist He Gong presents a contrasting vision in which narrative fragments, space destabilizes, and meaning emerges through uncertainty and displacement. Together, Petersen and He Gong place the Northwest Mystics within a broader contemporary conversation about consciousness, reality, and the search for meaning.

At the heart of the exhibition lies a remarkable historical connection. During the late 1980s, Tom Sherwood met He Gong in China, beginning a friendship that continued throughout Sherwood’s life. Their relationship reveals an often-overlooked aspect of Pacific Northwest mysticism: its deep engagement with Eastern philosophies and natural metaphysics. Where the World Breaks brings this hidden lineage into view, connecting artistic traditions across generations, cultures, and continents.

Internationally acclaimed contemporary artist He Gong will travel from China to attend the opening reception. His work is currently being featured in the Venice Biennale and the New York Biennale, situating the exhibition within an important international dialogue.

During the opening reception, He Gong will be presented with Edgeworks, a volume of ekphrastic poetry published by Igneus Press and written by Whatcom County poets in response to his paintings exhibited in Sophia Grace Gallery’s inaugural 2025 exhibition, Maps of No Return.

Through painting, ceramic sculpture, and ceramic bas-relief, Where the World Breaks asks whether art can still hold together what the world no longer can.

Sophia Grace Gallery
2026 Main St., Ste. B
Ferndale, WA 98248

sophiagracegallery.com

Featured Artworks

Wind and Cloud, Wenatchee River

Susan Bennerstrom, Pastel on archival paper, 28″ x 23″, 1986

Untitled

Woodblock print on archival paper,
11″ x 13″, 1970
From the Collection of Jud Sherwood


View Across the Yakima

Thomas Wood, Oil on canvas,
20″ x 16″, 1988
From the collection of Jud Sherwood

Fish and Tree

Thomas Wood, Oil on canvas,
29.5″ x 24″, 1997

From the collection of Jud Sherwood

Cook’s Cabin, Fir Island Midnight

Thomas WoodOil on wooden panel, 15.5″ x 11.5″, 1990

From the collection of Jud Sherwood

Fairhaven Docks

Thomas Wood, Oil on canvas,
17″ x 13″, 1988

From the collection of Jud Sherwood

Frozen Lake (Terrell Winter)

John Cole, Oil on canvas,
29.5″ x 24″, 1997
From the collection of Jud Sherwood

Hovander Lake Sunset

John Cole, Oil on canvas,
29.5″ x 24″, 1987
From the collection of Jud Sherwood

Kalama River #3

Thomas Wood, Oil on canvas,
18.5″ x 13.5″, 1977
From the collection of Jud Sherwood

The Union Club

He Gong, Oil on canvas,
48″ x 40″, 2008

St. Francis at Rashomon

He Gong, Acrylic on canvas,
48” x 40”, 2026

Goddess of Dogs

Michel Angela Petersen, High fire ceramic with mixed media, 8″ x 6″x 21”, 2025

Innana

Michel Angela Petersen, High fire porcelain with lace draping coil and slab built, 15” x 7” x 17”, 2015

Jingxi

Michel Angela Petersen, Hand built stoneware with coiled figure with Chinese underglaze, decals mid-range fire, 17” x 6” x 21”, 2018

Lascaux Madonna

Michel Angela Petersen, Ceramic with mixed media, 4″ x 2″ x 24”, 2026

Marguerite

Michel Angela Petersen, Porcelain with decals and clear, glaze hand built and painted, 14″ x 7″ x 18”, 1977

Pentacost

Michel Angela Petersen, Bas relief porcelain high fire with luster and Chinese decals, 25″ x 35″ x 3”, 2020

Solipsist

Michel Angela Petersen, Mid-range ceramic slab built with Underglaze and clear over-glaze, 14″ x 2″ x 12”, 2018

The Beloved

Michel Angela Petersen, Stoneware and porcelain with draped lace mid-range fire w/ high fire ceramic bowl 16” x 6” x 23”, 2017

The Wedding Dress

Michel Angela Petersen, Ceramic with lace mid-range fire experimental, 22″ x 7″x 36″, 2018

Centauress

Michel Angela Petersen, Hand-formed stoneware with porcelain veneer and mixed media low fire, 11” x 9” x 21”, 2015

Embedded

Michel Angela Petersen, Acrylic on canvas, 60” x 48”, 2026

Eliza-beth

Michel Angela Petersen, Stoneware with porcelain veneer and hand-made with underglaze and overglaze, 14” x 7” x 18, 2025