OUR STORY

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FOUR GENERATIONS OF LEGACY

Five master photographers across four generations of innovation. From Edward's modernism to Kim's personal expression. A living legacy influencing photography worldwide.

An elderly man with gray hair standing outdoors under a tree, holding a metal bowl in one hand and scratching his head with the other, smiling, with a wooden fence and garden in the background.

KIM weston

Grandson of Edward Weston, master of figurative and nude photography. Combines traditional darkroom techniques with deeply personal expression. Captures authentic human experience through timeless, evocative imagery.

  • Photography has always been my way of seeing the world and sharing that vision with others. Growing up in the Weston family, I learned early that a photograph should capture more than just what's in front of the lens—it should reveal something deeper.

    Working from my grandfather Edward's old studio here at Wildcat Hill, I feel the weight and privilege of carrying on this tradition while finding my own voice. Every session I do is built on trust and respect. I believe that's when the real magic happens—when someone feels comfortable enough to let their guard down and just be themselves.

    I still shoot film and print everything by hand in the darkroom. No shortcuts, no digital fixes. Each print is crafted individually, which means every photograph is truly one of a kind. To me, making a photograph is like composing music—it's all about finding that perfect balance between light and shadow, creating something that feels alive.

  • I've been behind the camera for over 50 years now, but my real education started much earlier. As a kid, I spent countless hours in the darkroom with my father Cole, learning to make gallery prints from Edward's original negatives. Later, I worked as an assistant to my uncle Brett, whose innovative eye taught me to see photography differently.

    That foundation gave me the technical skills, and I've always had a clear sense of my own artistic vision. From early on, I was drawn to photographing people, particularly the human form, because there's something honest and timeless about it. My style has evolved over the years, but the core of what I wanted to express was always there. While I'm proud to continue the family legacy, the work I create today is unmistakably mine.

  • I primarily shoot with medium and large format film cameras—6×7, 4×5, and 8×10 formats. These days I mostly use a Mamiya 67 that belonged to my father. There's something about working with these older cameras that slows you down and makes you really think about each shot.

    All my photographs are printed as traditional silver gelatin prints, usually in 8×10, 11×14, 16×20, and 20×24 sizes. I also create platinum prints and have been incorporating paint into my photographic work for over 15 years now, adding another layer to the art.

  • My wife Gina and I live and work right here on Wildcat Hill in Carmel Highlands, where Edward created some of his most famous photographs. The history of this place is incredible—you can feel it in every corner of the studio. As stewards of this historic property, Gina and I have always opened our doors to visitors who want to experience Edward's darkroom, learn about the place's rich history, and understand its significance in photography. We think of Wildcat Hill as a living museum - a place where the past and present of photography converge.

    We run a gallery on the property where people can see my current work alongside rare prints from Edward's archive, many printed by the family from his original negatives. Several times a year, I teach intimate workshops here—primarily figure photography, but also "how to see" and traditional darkroom techniques—drawing photographers from all over the world.

    In 2004, I started what's now called The Weston Collective, a scholarship program for high school and college students in Monterey County who are serious about black and white photography. It's my way of making sure these traditional skills don't disappear. Our son Zach runs the Weston Collective now.

  • For over 25 years, I've created an annual portfolio—twelve photographs representing each month of the year. This tradition started when I was working with my uncle Brett, who was famous for his own portfolio collections.

    These portfolios document not just my studio work but my travels to places like Lake Powell, Wyoming, Paris, Germany, Mexico, Spain, Italy, and Portugal. Some of my strongest collections came from photography workshops abroad, where I'd sometimes create an entire year's worth of work during one intensive trip.

    Each portfolio was originally housed in handmade linen boxes, making them as much about craftsmanship as photography. Looking back, this 25-year project represents some of my most consistent and ambitious work.

  • One of the most rewarding parts of what we do is our Print of the Month Club, inspired by a similar program Edward ran in the late 1930s. Every month, we select one of our finest prints to send to members.

    What started as a business idea has become something much more personal. Many of our members have become genuine friends over the years. They tell us their monthly prints have become treasured pieces in their homes, and honestly, that means everything to us.

    The program keeps us sharp—knowing we need to deliver something special each month pushes us to consistently create our best work. After all these years, we still get excited about each month's selection and love hearing how these photographs find their place in people's lives.

  • Over the years, I've been fortunate to show my work in galleries across the country and internationally. Here are some of the solo exhibitions that have meant the most to me:

    “Kim Weston Painted Photographs.” The Photographer’s Eye Collective Gallery, San Diego, CA, August, 2021.

    "Collector Prints." EXPOSED Gallery, Carmel, CA. August, 2016.

    "New Work by Kim Weston." EXPOSED Gallery, Carmel, CA. June 2016

    “Kim Weston Photographs.” Timeless Gallery, Beijing, China. November 2014.

    “Silver Gelatin and Painted Photographs.” Red Door Gallery, Mt. Shasta, CA. October 2012.

    “Painted Photographs.” Center for Photographic Art, Carmel, CA. June 2012

    “Painted Ballerinas.” Duncan Miller Gallery, Los Angeles CA. July 2011.

    “Painted Ballerinas.” Marjorie Evans Gallery, Carmel, CA. December 2010.

    “Legacy: The Work of Kim Weston.” Arts & Architecture Gallery, Ottawa, CAN. September-October 2010.

    “New Work.” Exposed Gallery, Carmel, CA. May 2010.

    “Painted Photographs.” Duncan Miller Gallery, Los Angeles CA. February 2009.

    “Painted Photographs.”  Pacific Grove Art Center, Pacific Grove, CA. January 2008.

    Kim Weston. Center for Photographic Arts. Carmel, CA. 1997.

    Kim Weston. Camera Obscura Gallery. Denver, CO. February – March, 1988.

    Kim Weston. Weston Gallery. Carmel, CA. April – May, 1987.

  • Being part of group shows has been incredibly rewarding, especially those featuring multiple generations of our family. These exhibitions tell the story of how photography has evolved while connecting us to our shared legacy:

    “Continuum: 4 Generations of Westons” by Edward, Brett, Cole, Kim and Zach Weston, Bradley Photographic Gallery, Pacific Grove, CA; June 21 - September 30, 2025

    “Painted Collaborations” by Kim and Zach Weston, Ilkaa’s Gallery & Atelier, Columbus, Ohio; 2023 - 2024

    “10 Year Anniversary Show.” Gallery Exposed, Carmel, California. September 27, 2019

    “Nude Truth: A Weston Four Generation Exhibition.” Studio & Gallery Villa Vinkkeli, Rovaniemi, Finland. November 18 - December 15, 2019

    "8x10 Fundraising Exhibition." Center for Photographic Art, Carmel, California. September 8th - November 4th 2018

    “The Golden State, Photographs from California - 1865 to the present.” Scott Nichols Gallery, San Francisco, CA. July - August 2018

    "Depth of Field." Center for Photographic Art, Carmel, California. April 14th - May 20th 2018

    "Weston 4 Generations: Classics of Modern American Photography." Kunsträume grenzenlos, Eisenstein, Germany. July - September 2017

    "Weston: 4 Generations." VB-Valokuvakeskus Photographic Center, Kuopio, Finland. March - May 2017

    “Under the Andalusian Sky.” Fundación Valentín de Madariaga. Sevilla, Spain. May – July 2016

    "Four Generations of Weston: Black and White." Viewpoint Gallery, Sacramento, CA. April – June 2016

    "The Westons." Scott Nichols Gallery. San Francisco. CA. February – August 2016

    “Grotteschi | Exploring Hieronymus Bosch.” Visual Arts Gallery, Carmel, CA. October 2015.

    “Photo Shanghai” Timeless Gallery, Beijing, Shanghai. September 2015.

    “Bajo El Cielo Andaluz.” Casa Degli Italini, Barcelona, Spain. September 2015.

    “Journey of the Heart: Exhibition of Straight Photography Original Prints 1839 – 2014.”
    National Museum of China, Beijing, China. November 2014

    “Between the Shadows.” Galerie a La Riviere, Paris, France. 2014.

    “All That Glitters is Not Gold.” Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ. November 2014.

    “10 Years at Wildcat.” The Loft Gallery, San Pedro, CA. August 2014.

    “Weston Four Generations 1886-2014.” Steinbeck Center, Salinas, CA. March 2014.

    “3 Generation Weston Photography Exhibition.” Kuusamo XVIII Nature Photo Festival, Kuusamo, Finland 2013.

    “3 Generations of The Weston Family of Photographers.” Midwest Museum of Art, Elkhart, IN. 2013.

    “4 Generations of Weston Photography.” Sang K Jun Arts and Science Gallery, Santa Clara, CA. 2013.

    “The Weston Family Show.” Open Shutter Gallery Durango, CO. December 2011 – February 2012.

    “Miniature Show.” Exposed Gallery, Carmel, CA. November 2011.

    “Pure Photography, Post Production and Mixed Media.” Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ. April – August 2011.

    Kim Weston “”Under the Influence: The Essence of Edward Weston in Contemporary Photography” Crowell’s Fine Art Gallery and Fine Framing, New Bedford, MA. July 2011.

    Kim Weston, Brett Weston and Randy Efros. 422 Framing + Gallery, Phoenix, AZ. February 2011.

    “Three Generations of Weston.”  The Gallery at the Creative Center for Photography, Hollywood, CA.  September – December, 2007.

    “Edward and Kim Weston Fotographs.”  Centro Fotograpfico Manuel Alvarez Bravo, Oaxaca, Mexico.  October, 2007.

    “40th Anniversary Show.”  Center for Photographic Art.  Carmel, CA.  November 2007.

    “Painted Photographs:  A Collaboration.”  Kim Weston and Reed Farrington.  PK Fine Artifacts, Sand City, CA.  November, 2006.

    “Painted Photographs:  A Collaboration.”  Kim Weston and Reed Farrington.  The Gallery of the Blackstone Winery, Hartnell College, Gonzales, CA.  August – November 2006.

    “The Noble Metals:  Platinum and Palladium.”  Group.  International Hall of Fame and Museum:  Main Gallery with The Oklahoma Arts Council.  Oklahoma, OK.  April – July 2005.

    Kim Weston and Randy Efros with Workshop Participants.  Bentley Gallery Projects, Phoenix, AZ.  November, 2003.

    Kim Weston and Gifford Ewing.  Shaw Jewelry.  Northeast Harbor, ME, 2003.

    “Mixed Media Show:  Paintings, Photographs and Painted Photographs.”  Marjorie Evans Gallery, Carmel, CA.  November 1999.

    “Three Generations of Westons.”  Pacific Grove Art Center.  Pacific Grove, CA.  1999.

    “Unpainted to the Last.  Moby Dick in American Art, 1940-1990.”  The Spencer Art Museum, University of Kansas.  Fall, 1994

    “Illuminated Artifice:  Masks, Facades, Tableaux Photography.” Kim Weston, Winston Boyer and Sandy Skoglund.  Brendan Walter Gallery, Santa Monica, CA.  June – July, 1991.

    “Edward – Cole – Kim Weston:  Three Generations of American Photography.”  German Tour:  13 museums and cities.  By Institut fur Kulturaustausch on behalf of The German – American Institute and The Wichita State University.  June 1989 – May 1991.

    Kim Weston and Tony Marsh.  Pacific Grove Art Center.  Pacific Grove, CA.  September 1990.

    Ulrich Museum.  Wichita, KS.  November, 1988 – January 1989.

    Pacific Grove Art Center.  Monterey, CA.  April – May, 1987.

    Monterey Peninsula Gallery.  Monterey, CA.  1987.

    “A Weston Retrospective – Three Generations of Westons.”  The Camera Obscura Gallery.  Denver, CO.  November – December, 1986.

    Commune e Pro Loco di Colorno.  Colorno – Parma, Italy.  May – June, 1985.

    Focus Gallery.  San Francisco, CA.  March – April, 1985.

    “The Weston Eye:  Edward, Cole, Brett and Kim”  Equivalents Gallery.  Seattle, WA.  April, 1985.

    “Weston:  Three Generations of Photography.”  The Photographer’s Gallery of Palo Alto.  October – November, 1983.

    “The Photographs of Kim Weston, David Sklar and Gary Rusk.”  The Gold Room Gallery, Scottsdale Community College, Scottsdale, AZ.  January – February 1983.

    “Recent Work.”  Kim Weston and Randy Efros.  Photography Southwest Gallery.  Scottsdale, AZ.  November, 1982.

    Photo Gallery International, Tokyo, Japan.  July – August, 1982.

    Zenith Gallery.  Pittsburg, PA.  1982.

    Brooks Institute.  Santa Barbara, CA.  May, 1980.

    Jeb Gallery.  Providence, RI.  April – May, 1980.

    Albright-Knox Member’s Gallery.  Buffalo, NY.  October – November, 1978.

    The Gilbert Gallery.  Chicago, IL.  March – April, 1978.

  • Portland Museum of Art, Portland, Maine; 2019

    Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita, Kansas; 2018

    New Hampshire Institute of Art, Manchester; 2017

    Monterey Museum of Art, Monterey, CA; 2016

    Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA; 2015

    National Museum of China, Beijing, China; 2014

    Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ; 2011, 2014

    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX; 2010

    University of Santa Cruz Library (Special Collections), Santa Cruz, CA; 2002

    University of Texas at Austin (Humanities Research Center), Austin, TX; 1996

    Private Collectors: Kirmo Wilen, Kirkkonummi, Finland. Robert Weingarten, Malibu, CA. Margaret Weston, Carmel, CA. And many other private collectors worldwide

  • “Kim Weston” The Photographer’s Eye Collective Gallery, San Diego, CA. August 2021

    "Four Generations of Weston Photography." Monterey Museum of Art, Monterey, CA. February 2017.

    “Photography as a Lifestyle” Arts Habitat, The Museum of Monterey, Monterey, CA. August 2014.

    “Growing up Weston.” Kuusamo XVIII Nature Photo Festival, Kuusamo, Finland 2013.

    “Growing up Weston.” Paul’s Photo, Torrance, CA. January 2013.

    “Painted Photographs.” Center for Photographic Art, Carmel, CA. June 2012.

    “Growing up Weston.” Longmont Museum, Longmont, CO. May 2012.

    “Growing up Weston.” Wildcat Hill, Carmel, CA. March 18 & 19, 2011.

    “In gallery talk about Brett Weston.” Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ. February 2011.

    “Growing up Weston.” California State University Monterey Bay, Marina, CA. February, 2011.

    “Growing up Weston.” La Mirada Museum, Monterey, CA. September, 2009.

    “Kim Weston, A Grandson’s Journey.” Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ. December, 2008.

    “Kim Weston, Photographer.” Santa Fe, NM. October 2008.

    “Life and Work of Brett Weston.”  In conjunction with Brett Weston exhibit at The Museum of Fine Arts.  Houston, TX.  2007.

    “Kim Weston:  Life Work.”  Alternative Photo International Symposium & Santa Fe PhotoArts Market.  Santa Fe.  2007.

    “Edward Weston.”  In conjunction with Edward Weston exhibit at The Getty Museum.  Los Angeles, CA.  2007.

    “Kim Weston Life Work.” Amigo del Sol Language School.  Oaxaca, Mexico.  2005.

    Featured Artist.  First Mondays Art Salon at Burton Barr Central Library.  Phoenix, AZ.  November, 2003.

    “Edward Weston:  A Legacy.” In conjunction with Edward Weston exhibit at The Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens. San Marino, CA. September, 2003.

    Lecture, Rangeview High School Art Department, Aurora, CO. November 1987.

No matter how fast I could do it with the digital camera I don’t think I would get the same thing out of it. The passion I have for formulating an idea stands alone. It is the important essence of what I do.
— Kim Weston
Black and white photo of a woman with short hair wearing dark clothing, resting her head and shoulder on a textured dark surface. She is holding her hand up to her chest and looking directly at the camera. Above her head is a large basket of white calla lilies resting on her head.

GINA weston

Businesswoman, mother, philanthropist, and muse to the Weston legacy. Co-founded Weston Photography and the Weston Scholarship supporting young artists. Model for Kim's most recognized images and mentor to emerging photographers.

  • Gina developed her foundational business expertise while growing up in her family's hotel in downtown Carmel, where she mastered everything from guest relations to financial operations. In 2000, she led the effort to bring her family's photography business online—single-handedly launching and managing all aspects of e-commerce sales and complex workshop programs—modernizing operations while honoring the traditional, analog nature of Weston photography. As Creative Director of Weston Photography, she works alongside her husband Kim, focusing on visual aspects of the company while maintaining the artistic vision. From one of photography's most significant locations, she manages a thriving online business and uses digital tools to support the day-to-day operations and long-term growth of Weston Photography.

  • Living at the historic Wildcat Hill for over three decades, Gina has maintained daily inspirational walks with Kim for 35 years—an enduring creative ritual that strengthens their partnership both personally and professionally. She balances her roles as Creative Director, mother, and digital storyteller while creating a warm, welcoming environment that hosts international visitors, collectors, and scholars. Her iPhone photography captures and shares the beauty of daily life and artistic process, documenting their journey together through social media platforms.

  • Co-founded the Weston Scholarship supporting young artists, demonstrating her commitment to nurturing the next generation of creative talent. As mentor to emerging photographers, she shares her deep knowledge of the Weston family legacy developed through decades of immersive experience—living and working within the Weston tradition, studying family photographs, and assisting in exhibitions.

  • Model for Kim's most recognized images, Gina is a professionally trained massage therapist with in-depth study in anatomy, bringing both comfort with the human form and technical understanding to their collaborative work. She became a self-taught scholar in art history and photography, engaging with the daily life and stories at Wildcat Hill while helping preserve and share the Weston family legacy with the world.

The greatest gift from modeling was an affirmation of my own worth and beauty. It was a transformational time in my life. My journey toward self-realization.
— Gina Weston
A woman with short curly hair, smiling, wearing a denim shirt, standing with arms crossed in front of a collage of photographs and posters.

ZACH weston

(Kim and Gina’s son)

Fourth generation Weston photographer and Executive Director of The Weston Collective. Focuses on landscapes and abstracts using traditional black and white film. Continues the family legacy while developing his own artistic vision.

  • Zach is a fourth-generation fine-art photographer from one of the most influential families in American photographic history—great-grandson of Edward Weston, great-nephew of Brett Weston, grandson of Cole Weston, and son of Kim Weston. While subconsciously influenced by the artistic community surrounding him throughout his childhood, he first picked up a camera in college. Zach learned to process and print his images from his father, Kim Weston, in the darkroom at his childhood home in Carmel Highlands, California, mastering traditional analog techniques passed down through generations.

  • Zach works exclusively in black and white film photography, focusing on landscapes, figure studies, and abstract subject matter. His approach centers on making the unnoticeable noticeable—taking something once passed over and highlighting it through unique patterns, shapes, and highlights of light. He has an uncomplicated view of the world, enjoying rudimentary interactions with the surrounding environment and exploring the abstractness of the world around us. Through his work, he hopes to bring about feelings of humility, respect, and nurture while reversing the detrimental shift in how humans view themselves in relation to other living and non-living entities.

  • Zach photographs with black and white film using a Mamiya RB 6x7, Wista 4x5, and Pentax 67. He shoots primarily with TMAX-400 film and prints on Ilford Multigrade Fiber Classic paper, maintaining the traditional analog processes of the Weston family legacy.

  • Based in Big Sur, California, Zach is constantly observing his surroundings and looking for photographic opportunities in everyday moments. He believes that everywhere you look, there is something to photograph—it depends on how you look and frame it. Living and working within the continuing Weston photographic tradition, he balances carrying forward his family's artistic legacy while developing his own unique vision and voice in contemporary fine-art photography.

I am really glad my parents didn’t force photography on me. They let it happen naturally and if they hadn’t, it would have ruined the experience for me.
— Zach Weston
Black and white photo of a man with a beard and messy hair, smiling and standing outdoors, holding a camera with a large lens, wearing a checkered shirt and khaki pants.

Edward weston

Master of 20th century American photography and modernist pioneer. Revolutionized the medium through landscapes, nudes, and still lifes. His innovative vision emphasized natural forms and timeless beauty.

Read ‘A Photographer’s Love Of Life’ Essay By Alex Nyerges →



Photography suits the temper of this age – of active bodies and minds. It is a perfect medium for one whose mind is teeming with ideas, imagery, for a prolific worker who would be slowed down by painting or sculpting, for one who sees quickly and acts decisively, accurately.
— Edward Weston
Black and white portrait of a man with styled hair, wearing a leather jacket and a high-neck shirt, standing in front of tree bark.

BRETT weston

Second son of Edward Weston and "child genius of American photography." He became a master photographer in his own right and was known for his unique vision and abstract style throughout his career.

  • Weston's earliest images from the 1920s reflect an intuitive and sophisticated sense of abstraction. He began photographing the dunes at Oceano, California, in the early 1930s. Brett preferred the high gloss papers and ensuing sharp clarity of the gelatin silver photographic materials of the f64 Group rather than the platinum matte photographic papers common in the 1920s and encouraged Edward Weston to explore the new silver papers in his own work.

    Throughout the decades of the 1950s and 1970s, Brett Weston's style changed sharply and was characterized by high contrast, abstract imagery. The subjects he chose were, for the most part, not unlike what interested him early in his career; plant leaves, knotted roots and tangled kelp along the beach. He concentrated mostly on close-ups and abstracted details, but his prints reflected a preference for high contrast that reduced his subjects to a pure form.

     Brett Weston’s lifetime devotion and total involvement with the medium created a body of work and a contribution to photography that transcends comparisons to his father and has few equals in contemporary photography.

    In November of 1996, Oklahoma City collector Christian Keesee acquired from the Brett Weston Estate the most complete body of Weston's work in existence. As one of the largest and most significant collections by an individual American photographer, The Brett Weston Archive, founded in 1997, serves as a resource for museums, collectors, historians, and publishers worldwide.

The taint of age can be very beautiful. The wreckage of man-made objects is something more beautiful than the new. Rust and weathering adds a patina of . . . well, I call it ‘elegant shit’ or ‘elegant gorp’.
— Brett Weston
Black and white photo of an older man with a beard standing outdoors next to a large camera on a tripod. The man is wearing a dark t-shirt, jeans, a wristwatch, and has glasses hanging around his neck. He is smiling and has one hand on his hip, with a wooden fence and grassy area in the background.

COLE weston

(Kim’s father)

Edward Weston's youngest son who became his trusted assistant and legacy keeper. Pioneered color photography while the family tradition remained black and white. Printed Edward's negatives for over 30 years after his death.

  • In 1957 Cole began shooting his first color photographs of the magnificent Big Sur coast, Monterey Peninsula and central California. At this time he carried on his own portrait business while assisting his ailing father, who passed away in 1958. Edward had authorized Cole to print from Edward’s negatives after his death, so Cole continued printing Edward’s work while pursuing his own fine art photography.

    In 1975 Cole began lecturing and conducting workshops on his father’s photography as well as his own. With his work in the theater arts Cole was a natural when it came to teaching and lecturing and his many students still comment on what a great workshop he gave. He traveled throughout the United States, England, Europe, Russia, Mexico, New Zealand and the South Pacific photographing and inspiring others with his characteristic enthusiasm and charm.

    In 1988 after three decades devoted to printing his father’s work, Cole at last set aside his responsibility to Edward’s legacy and refocused on his own photography. Cole had his first solo exhibition in San Francisco in 1971. Since then, his work has been featured in more than sixty exhibitions worldwide and has been collected by museums throughout the United States and Europe. His work has been featured in numerous gallery shows and publications with three monographs and numerous articles having been published on his exquisite photography. Michael Hoffman from Aperture Publications once quoted, “In the history of photography there are but a few masters of color photography, Cole Weston is assuredly one of these masters of the medium whose dramatic powerful images are a source of great joy and pleasure”. Cole passed away from natural causes on April 20th, 2003.

    Like Cole, who once carried on the legacy of his father’s photography, his children have decided, as a tribute to their father, to carry on printing and to offer Trust prints of Cole’s fine color photographs. Cole Weston was a dedicated artist and master of fine photography. Hopefully the availability of modern prints will make it possible for photographic enthusiasts everywhere to continue to enjoy his life’s work.

To see color as form means looking at the image in a new way, trying to free oneself from absorption in subject matter.
— Cole Weston