William Betcher: Memento Mori, on view from January 31 to May 24, 2026 at the Danforth Museum of Art in the Delos Reyes Murtaugh Gallery, presents a contemplative and quietly unsettling exploration of photography as a vessel for memory. Rooted in a long-standing investigation of time and place, Betcher’s work invites viewers to reflect on how images hold traces of lives once lived, and how photographs themselves become haunted objects shaped by absence and remembrance.
Drawing inspiration from Civil War–era portraiture, Betcher engages with a period when photography was deeply intertwined with rituals of mourning and remembrance. Early photographic processes, fragile and impermanent by nature, become central to his inquiry. Through these references, he connects 19th-century attitudes toward death with contemporary concerns surrounding image-making, preservation, and loss. The resulting portraits feel suspended between eras, evoking both historical weight and modern uncertainty.
Betcher’s recent works explore mortality and the uncanny through damaged artifacts, faded transparencies, and visual disruptions that suggest unseen presences. Faces emerge and dissolve, forms hover at the edge of recognition, and the photograph becomes less a document than a threshold. These works resist clarity, instead offering a space where viewers confront the instability of memory and the lingering echoes carried by physical objects marked by time.
As evolving photographic objects, Betcher’s memento mori function as a contemporary echo of spirit photography, where belief, illusion, and materiality intertwine. His use of found elements—particularly toys marked by age and wear—introduces narratives of innocence, conflict, and forgotten play, each imbued with implied histories. In
Memento Mori, Betcher proposes photography not as a fixed record, but as a living artifact—one that quietly absorbs memory, loss, and the spectral presence of what has passed, reminding us that images, like lives, are never truly still.
Image:
© William Betcher