Cheryl Clegg: The Endangered Lobstermen, on view at the Griffin Museum from March 2 to May 30, 2026, is a poignant photographic meditation on labor, heritage, and survival along the coast of Maine. Sparked by the red-listing of the American lobster, Clegg’s project shifts the focus from environmental statistics to lived experience, asking what happens when an ecosystem under threat places an entire way of life at risk. The exhibition centers the people whose identities are inseparable from the sea they work.
Rather than documenting boats and traps alone,
Cheryl Clegg turns her lens toward families and individuals embedded in Maine’s lobstering communities. Her portraits reveal pride passed down through generations, along with the quiet anxiety of an uncertain future. Weathered hands, steady gazes, and intimate domestic scenes speak to resilience forged through daily dependence on tides, seasons, and fragile marine balance. These photographs honor a culture that has endured through cooperation, skill, and an unspoken pact with nature.
Clegg’s background in photographic illustration lends the series a careful balance of clarity and empathy. The images are visually striking yet grounded, avoiding romanticization while acknowledging the dignity of hard-won tradition. Viewers encounter not an industry in abstraction, but neighbors, parents, and children whose livelihoods are shaped by policy decisions, environmental change, and forces far beyond the harbor. The work gently underscores how ecological crises ripple outward, touching human communities in deeply personal ways.
With
The Endangered Lobstermen, Clegg continues a long-standing commitment to socially engaged storytelling. Her career, spanning decades of commercial and personal work, informs a visual language that is both accessible and deeply felt. This exhibition stands as a testament to the strength of Maine’s lobstering families while inviting reflection on what is at stake when tradition, environment, and economic survival collide. It is a reminder that preservation is as much about people as it is about species.
Image:
The Barrett Family, Addison, ME. © Cheryl Clegg