2020 Annual Student Art Exhibition Images
Preview
Student Exhibition Year
2020
Description
One in a series of eight untitled color photographs. Each photograph depicts the interior of the home of the artist’s grandparents. An accompanying audio interview with the artist's grandmother is available here. Presented as part of the 2020 Annual Student Exhibit in the Berman Museum of Art at Ursinus College.
Artist Statement
My grandfather and grandmother have been the subjects of my photography work for the last two years. For the past ten years, before his passing in May 2019, my grandfather battled dementia, which ultimately led to him being housed in a home for the memory impaired. Understanding the disease of Alzheimer’s and the effects on my grandmother are just small parts of their story, but I find them important to tell because of the silence and familial tension felt in dealing with this disease.
Alzheimer’s Disease is caused by the slow abnormal buildup of certain proteins within the brain. The amyloid protein creates plaques around brain cells, and the tau protein creates tangles within neurons. These factors will eventually lead to the neurons being unable to function and to eventually die. The disease dehumanizes its victims, taking away the person they were and replacing it with anger or confusion. Through this work, I hope to impart an understanding of these sorts of situations in order to restore part of that humanity and provide comfort to those staring down these challenges.
Since 1960, the house itself has been witness to many chapters of their lives. Raising kids, sending them to school then college, weddings, funerals, and holidays with grandchildren. Over time, just like our bodies, houses collect scars—indications of stories or simply marks of the space being lived in. While the construction of this domestic enclosure is wood and steel, there is much more going on in making the space a home. Understanding the dynamics of a couple that battled this disease are just one of many taking place.
These interior scenes paired with my grandmother’s testimony explore the role of the lone caretaker within their home environment and illustrates the strength required to carry the weight of dedication, as well as the treatment of this disease in our communities. She is not pictured in any of the images, allowing the viewer to imagine her facing these challenges in life and even consider similar challenges that they or the elders in their life have faced.
Rights Statement
Copyright of the underlying work is held by the artist. The digital image presented here is for educational purposes only and is not for commercial use.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Keywords
student art exhibit, 2020, color photograph, color film, digital scan, interior, house, bathroom, window, wreath, flowers
Comments
Recipient of the Donald E. Camp Award. Ursinus College Emeritus Professor of Art Donald E. Camp established and selects this award for work that exhibits risk-taking in art.