150 Cottage Hill Ave.
Living with Modernism: Kelli Connell’s Pictures for Charis and Double Life, on view at Elmhurst Art Museum from January 25 to April 27, 2026, offers a profound exploration of human relationships, identity, and the landscapes we inhabit. Connell’s work bridges the personal and the historical, placing contemporary dialogues of queerness, intimacy, and ecological awareness alongside the groundbreaking photography of Edward Weston.
In the main galleries, Connell’s
Pictures for Charis revisits the sites of Weston’s celebrated black-and-white landscapes and portraits of Charis Wilson in California and the West from 1934–1945. With 45 images of her longtime partner Betsy Odom, Connell engages in a visual conversation spanning eighty years of ecological and social change. Paired with 48 original Weston prints and excerpts from Wilson’s writing, the series underscores connections between intimacy, environment, and the feminist gaze, illuminating how both nature and human relationships evolve over time.
The McCormick House gallery presents Connell’s ongoing
Double Life series, begun in 2002, which explores the fluidity of self within intimate relationships. Featuring two personas both played by collaborator Kiba Jacobson, these digital images interrogate sexuality, gender, family, and lifestyle choices. For Elmhurst, Connell engages with the architecture of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s modernist house, integrating its geometric rigor with poetic inspiration from Isabella Gardner, creating a dialogue between space, self, and narrative. The resulting works extend the
Double Life exploration, highlighting how identity is continually shaped by context, relationships, and imagination.
Across both exhibitions, Connell demonstrates an acute sensitivity to time, place, and human experience. Her photographs navigate intimacy and distance, historic continuity and contemporary reflection, inviting viewers to witness both the quiet gestures of personal connection and the broader currents of cultural and environmental change.
Living with Modernism celebrates the enduring power of photography to illuminate relationships, identity, and the subtle interplay between people and the world they inhabit.
Image:
Kelli Connell, Betsy, Doug Short’s Home, 2015, 40x50 inches © Kelli Connell