Lindy Chambers fell to earth in Texas, just outside Houston, where heat, humidity, and horizon continue to shape her way of seeing. Her paintings examine the quiet tension between clarity and distortion—where light wavers, and the familiar becomes psychological. Working primarily in acrylic on large square canvases, she builds layered atmospheres that hover between calm and collapse, capturing the disquiet of stillness and the emotion inside color.

Chambers has exhibited at galleries including Deborah Colton Gallery in Houston and Valley House Sculpture and Garden Gallery in Dallas, as well as institutions such as the Pearl Museum in Houston and the Grace Museum in Abilene. Her work has been recognized with awards including the Texas Big 10 for Art at KCAM, the Silver Awardfrom Art Forward, and the Alexander Rutsch Painting Award from the Pelham Art Center.

Her practice remains rooted in observation but resolved in atmosphere—paint as a way of holding still inside instability, where light becomes a form of emotion and landscape turns to memory.