From January 08, 2026 to January 31, 2026
Lauren Grabelle: Deer Diary unfolds as a quiet yet profound meditation on presence, place, and the porous boundary between the human and the wild. Set within the expansive landscapes of Montana, the project occupies a unique space where fine art, documentary observation, and wildlife photography intersect. Rather than positioning herself as a distant observer, Grabelle invites the land and its inhabitants into the act of authorship, allowing chance, movement, and time to shape the work.
At the heart of Deer Diary is the trail camera, a humble tool transformed into a conduit for introspection. Hidden along game paths and fence lines, the camera records deer as they pass through their own routines, unbothered by the human gaze. These encounters become a form of spiritual self-portraiture, where Grabelle’s presence is implied rather than seen. The deer emerge as collaborators, their gestures and pauses echoing ancient narratives that have followed the animal through mythology, religion, and storytelling since humanity’s earliest image-making.
The resulting photographs feel both intimate and timeless. Illuminated by infrared glow or soft ambient light, the deer appear suspended between worlds, at once corporeal and symbolic. They inhabit a space that feels ritualistic, recalling cave paintings, medieval allegories, and folktales in which animals serve as guides, messengers, or mirrors of human emotion. In this context, the Montana landscape is not a backdrop but an active participant, shaping the rhythm and mood of each image.
Grabelle’s broader practice has long been rooted in honoring people, animals, and environments with empathy and restraint, and Deer Diary extends this ethos with particular clarity. Her sensitivity to place, honed through years of editorial and fine art work as well as solitary time in wilderness settings, lends the series an authenticity that resists spectacle. The images do not dramatize wildlife; they listen to it.
Ultimately, Deer Diary is an invitation to slow down and reconsider how we look, not only at animals but at ourselves within the natural world. Through patience and humility, the project suggests that meaning emerges not from control, but from attentive coexistence, where observation becomes a form of reverence.
Image: © Lauren Grabelle