50 Scott St.
To step
Into the Complete Unknown is to enter a realm shaped not by certainty, but by the fragile echoes of what has been lived, lost, and slowly reclaimed. This group exhibition gathers five artists whose photographs illuminate the quiet thresholds where identity wavers, memories resurface, and transformation begins. Their works do not attempt to fix meaning. Instead, they dwell in the shifting space between what we hold close and what inevitably slips away.
Annette LeMay Burke’s project traces the way personal history imprints itself onto place. By projecting family photographs onto the walls of her former home, she creates images where past and present breathe together. These layered scenes suggest a house remembering itself, holding the weight of stories long tucked into its corners.
Jacque Rupp explores widowhood as a terrain marked by contradiction—grief, renewal, longing, and strength intertwined. Her images honor the emotional labor of rebuilding a life, revealing how loss can sharpen one’s sense of presence. In contrast,
Marna Clarke turns her gaze inward, observing the body as a vessel of time. Her portraits of aging soften the boundaries between vulnerability and dignity, offering a meditation on the quiet endurance woven into everyday existence.
Charlotta María Hauksdóttir bridges personal and geographic landscapes, drawing parallels between the shifting contours of Iceland and the fluctuations of domestic life. Her photographs show how external change—economic, political, environmental—reverberates within the private sphere. Complementing this,
Rohina Hoffman’s work celebrates the sustaining rituals of family. Through acts of gathering and nourishment, she reveals how love endures through the simplest gestures, forming a sanctuary in uncertain times.
Together, the artists in
Into the Complete Unknown map the emotional geography of transition. Their photographs remind us that stepping into uncertainty is not an act of abandonment, but one of becoming—a movement toward clarity shaped by resilience, tenderness, and the unspoken strength found in navigating the unknown.
Image:
Under the Painting, 2021 © Marna Clarke