Ashima Yadava: Front Yard, presented at Chung 24 Gallery from January 7 to February 14, 2026, offers a quietly radical rethinking of documentary photography through collaboration, intimacy, and shared authorship. Rooted in the symbolic space of the “front yard,” the exhibition frames domestic thresholds as sites where personal histories, cultural memory, vulnerability, and resilience intersect. Here, the home becomes both a literal and metaphorical landscape—one that reflects love, fear, silence, and survival across diverse communities in the San Francisco Bay Area.
At the heart of this body of work is Yadava’s refusal of the traditional, one-sided documentary gaze. Instead, she invites her subjects into the image-making process itself. Families are given black-and-white photographic prints and encouraged to color, mark, or embellish them as they choose. These gestures—thumbprints forming balloons, flowers outlining poetic lines in Tamil or Urdu—transform the photograph into a living, tactile conversation. The resulting images reveal not only how people wish to be seen, but how they understand themselves within broader social and emotional realities.
The project spans households from varied socio-economic backgrounds, each contributing a distinct visual and cultural language. Poetry, text, ornament, and touch coexist within the photographic frame, collapsing boundaries between documentation and expression. These collaborative acts often open the door to deeper dialogue, allowing stories to unfold slowly and organically. What emerges is a collective portrait of communities negotiating identity, belonging, and care amid uncertainty and global unrest.
Yadava’s practice has long positioned photography as a tool for social engagement and reform, and
Front Yard continues this commitment with remarkable sensitivity. By foregrounding collaboration over extraction, the work suggests that understanding begins not with observation, but with participation. In a world marked by division and distrust, this exhibition proposes a gentler, enduring alternative: the shared sowing of visual seeds that affirm connection, dignity, and humanity.
Image:
Ashima Yadava, Frontyard_Manju_02 (AP 2/2)
Archival Pigment Print of Original Inkjet Print with Mixed Media
22 x 17 in, at Chung 24 Gallery © Ashima Yadava