ThE SUN SETS MIDAFTERNOON

Jessica Hays

“Connection to the landscapes I inhabit is the main driver of my work,  leading me to explore them through lens-based media, installation, and text.”  

— JESSICA HAYS

Artist Statement

The Sun Sets Midafternoon, 2020-23 

 “Connection to the landscapes I inhabit is the main driver of my work,  leading me to explore them through lens-based media, installation, and text.”  Wildfires are raging across the western United States, burning up increasingly large swaths of land every year. While fire is a natural part of many ecosystems, the increasing presence of larger, faster, and hotter fires is a reminder of the rapidly changing environment. This work explores solastalgia, which describes emotional and existential distress caused by negative environmental change, generally experienced by people with lived experiences closely related to the land. Integrating photographs, moving images, and text in installations and books, The Sun Sets Midafternoon examines the immediate aftermath of mega-fires in surrounding communities and what the experience of local fires is like, interweaving narratives of ecological devastation, collective trauma, and climate grief.

“Note, for example, how Jessica estranges us from classically beautiful landscapes by offering instead seemingly unearthly colors in the skies, or atmospheres of choking thickness, or smolder and char – that we can smell, that we can feel – as far as the eye can see. The estrangement that Jessica enacts in her pictures is persuasive because it is informed by a unique perspective – it literally springs from her history. We see how an otherwise “topical” examination of fires and climate crisis becomes uncanny in the hands of the photographer who allows (invites) pre-reflective personal perception to inform her picture-making. Uncanny because entirely individual to the maker, and yet formally palpable to the viewer.

After grasping the initial call to arms conveyed in these photographs, we come to recognize that they are simply too beautiful – too wholly thoughtful – to express grief alone (although it is certainly there). In The Sun Sets Midafternoon, Jessica Hays shows us that real love and reverence for the land is the foundation of hope and of any real possibility of change.” 

Tim Carpenter, photographer 

Meet the artist:

Jessica Hays

Jessica Hays is a conceptual photographer and artist based in Montana and Chicago. Her intimate work draws on personal experience to communicate ubiquitous human experiences, tackling topics like mental health, landscape change, and loss. Grounded in the American West, she explores relationships between people, places, and experiences of being deeply connected to one’s surroundings. 

Her work is shown nationally and internationally in galleries and museums, published in a variety of magazines and textbooks, and is held in several public and private collections in the US and Canada. She was recently recognized as a Critical Mass Finalist, shortlisted for the BarTur Environmental Award, and named a 2023 Chulitna Artist Fellow. Hays’ work aims to explore the interactions between psychology and climate change, investigating how landscapes affect the human psyche from trauma to restoration. To view more of her work, visit jessicahaysart.com 

  

Photography MFA, 2023 

  

Official Website: jessicahaysart.com 

Official Instagram: @jess_the_photographer

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