Jonathan Calm – To Wherever, Forever: Archives of Absence & Sites of Passage, on view at Santa Clara University from February 5 to June 13, 2026, is a layered and quietly powerful meditation on movement, memory, and the landscapes shaped by exclusion. Working across photography, video, embroidery, and installation, Calm traces how histories of erasure persist within the American terrain, revealing places where beauty and violence occupy the same ground.
Presented at the de Saisset Museum,
Archives of Absence examines sites where communities and lives have been displaced or submerged. In the
Ghost Ship photographs, the iconic Phantom Ship of Crater Lake is transformed into a drifting vessel, hovering between myth and history, migration and mourning. This spectral image resonates with the legacy of forced journeys, while remaining rooted in a specific American landscape. Elsewhere,
Drown Town uses embroidered photographs to restore visibility to towns erased by dam projects, each stitch acting as a quiet act of remembrance. Cyanotype grids of hurricanes further expand this archive, underscoring how environmental catastrophe repeatedly impacts marginalized communities.
The exhibition also confronts geographies of racial exclusion. In
Sundown Town, embroidered images mark places where Black presence was once violently restricted, surrounded by road signage that transforms the gallery into a space of warning and witness. Across campus, at the Art & Art History Department Gallery,
Sites of Passage revisits locations listed in the historic Negro Motorist Green Book. Through photographs, targets bearing the names of victims of police violence, and videos filmed from inside a moving vehicle, Calm collapses past and present, turning travel into both testimony and vigil.
Together, these intertwined exhibitions form an unsettled map of the United States—an archive built from fragments, absences, and slow looking. Calm invites viewers to consider how movement through space can become an ethical act, and how remembering, like travel, demands attention to what has been left behind as much as what lies ahead.
Image:
Jonathan Calm, Green Book (Lorraine Motel), 2016. Archival Pigment Print, 20" X 20"
Courtesy of the Artist and Rena Bransten Gallery © Jonathan Calm