About
Corbin Rouette is a photographer and sculptor from Prescott, Arizona. His work is deeply rooted in personal experience and shaped by the skateboarding subculture that has long influenced his perspective. Through objects and images, Corbin creates an ongoing dialogue that explores memory, identity, and his evolving sense of place in the world. Drawing from family archives, particularly those of his father and late mother, he reflects on connection, loss, and the narratives that shape a life.
His practice centers on themes of growing up, processing grief, and interpreting how environment and experience inform perception. Using landscapes, portraiture, and abstract imagery, Corbin explores emotional resonance and the interconnectivity between people, place, and memory.
Corbin has exhibited work across Arizona and nationally, including at the Tucson Museum of Art, Praxis Photo Arts Center in Chicago, and Hidden Light Gallery in Flagstaff. His photography has been featured in Thrasher Magazine and Arizona Highways. In 2024, he was awarded the Atiba Jefferson Scholarship from the College Skateboarding Education Foundation and has received additional support from the Arizona Commission on the Arts.
Alongside his work, Corbin maintains a commercial practice focused on documenting products, people, craft, and performance through visual storytelling.
He is currently completing a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Photography, Video, and Imaging at the University of Arizona.