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Houston Center for Photography (HCP) is pleased to feature two parallel solo exhibitions that explore two diametrically different relationships to the EarthEdi Hirose: Extractive Republic and Jake Eshelman: Cherish the Clear Skies! Vitality in a Ukrainian Village. The exhibitions open with a public reception on April 8 and will conclude on June 19, 2022.

Jake Eshelman

Cherish the Clear Skies! Vitality in a Ukrainian Village

 

Focusing on a single family and its life on a small farm in Central Ukraine, Jake Eshelman’s work celebrates the exuberance and values of Ukrainian rural culture. By highlighting its deep, symbiotic relationship with the land, his exhibition asks us to consider what is possible for a future we and the Earth share.

 

Pronto más información en español.

 

Cherish the Clear Skies! celebrates the vibrancy and exuberance of Ukrainian rural culture and its deep, symbiotic relationship with the lands that have spurted it. Since 2018, Houston-based artist and visual researcher Jake Eshelman has been working in Heisykha, Kyiv Oblast, focusing on a single family and its life on a tiny ancestral farm. Even though the small village of Heisykha is far from immune to the pressures of climate change and the onslaught of industrialization—particularly the proliferation of monocropping—its dwellers rely on the fruits of the earth and maintain a daily connection with the rhythms of the planet and its seasons. Indeed, celebrations of crops, harvests, and natural cycles dictate the Ukrainian calendar and underlie all major holidays whether secular or adopted by Christianity. Likewise, local plants, flowers, birds, and animals abound in the material and visual culture: from symbol-loaded bouquets to various forms of home decor and embroidery. Especially, they give meaning to rushnyky–highly ornate ceremonial towels that adorn icons and also, today, images of loved ones. As Eshelman observes, neither communism, capitalism, nor even Christianity could fully displace the centrality of the ancient “Mother Earth” to Ukrainian culture.

Although the adults of the Ivanchuk family have day jobs that would be familiar to many here in the US (the father is a handyman and the mother–head teacher at the village school), and two daughters delight in secrets and Instagram as much as their counterparts elsewhere, they also grow, raise, forage, and preserve their own food. And despite its miniscule size, their subsistence farming is rich and diverse, encompassing fields of different grains, potatoes, fruit trees, and lush herb and flower gardens. Guarded by their beloved cats and dog, Rex, the household includes myriad other-than-human residents: chickens, ducks, rabbits, goats, and pigs. As is the case in any agroecology, the relationships between people and animals is endlessly complex, yet all protagonists—including the other-than-human—are equally important to the dwelling and in Eshelman’s work. Ultimately, the sheer delight in simple pleasures of the Earth’s gifts experienced by all living beings takes center stage in his photographs. Many images exude vitality and fecundity. These photographs are also a sobering reminder that we already have all that we need and that we are also on the brink of losing it all. However, at the moment, the stakes for the inhabitants of Heisykha and Ukraine are much higher than for us in Houston. As there’s much to learn from this quietly profound household six-thousand miles away, this work also encourages us to consider what was—and is—possible for a future we all share.


About the Artist

Jake Eshelman (b. 1989, USA) is a photo-based artist and visual researcher exploring the complex relationships between people and other-than-human beings. He believes that humanity’s curious and self-imposed dissociation with the natural world provides a palpable backdrop in which we can more fully (re)consider our role in ecology. Through a documentary and intuitive practice, his recent work investigates interspecies relationships in industry, agriculture, and conservation in order to question the tenets of anthropocentrism and the implications behind the Enlightenment rationalization of “nature.”

Eshelman has exhibited work internationally, most notably at Vantaa Art Museum Artsi in Helsinki, Finland; Houston Center for Photography in Houston, TX; The Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities at Cambridge University, UK; The Morgan Conservatory in Cleveland, OH; The Corcoran School of the Arts and Design in Washington D.C.; Hume Gallery in Chicago, IL; and Des Lee Gallery in St. Louis, MO. His work is in the permanent collection of the Chicago Design Museum and has also been included in independently published photo books, collaborative artist books, and even a children’s book by Simon & Schuster encouraging aspiring creatives to pursue artistic careers. 

Jake is currently pursuing his MA in Ecology & Spirituality from The University of Wales, Trinity Saint David. He holds a BA in Classical Literature, with a concentration in mythology, hermeneutics, and reception theory, from Trinity University in San Antonio, TX, as well a minor in Studio Art and Art History. Jake is also a member of The Fairy Investigation Society.

https://jakeeshelman.com/


Questions

For questions about this exhibition, please contact Samuel Rhodes, Exhibitions Assistant, at samuel@hcponline.org or 713-529-4755.


 

Dates

          • Exhibition On View
            April 8 – June 19, 2022
          • Opening Reception: Friday, April 8
            5:00–6:00pm, members’ preview
            6:00–8:00pm, general public 
          • Jake Eshelman Artist Talk: Saturday, May 7, 3 pm
          • Free Exhibition Drop-in Tours:
            Saturday, April 23, noon
            Saturday, May 21, noon
            Sunday, June 12, noon