Sacred Ground, on view from March 6 through October 4, 2026 at the Anchorage Museum, presents a contemplative body of photographs by Yup’ik artist Jeron Joseph. Installed in the museum’s First Floor Family Galleries South Hallway, the exhibition reflects years of attentive observation along the coastal landscapes of Western Alaska. Joseph’s images explore the quiet rhythms of the land—its shifting light, seasonal cycles, and fragile ecosystems—while also conveying a deeper cultural understanding of place rooted in Yup’ik traditions.
At the heart of the work lies the concept of
ellarpak, a Yup’ik word often translated simply as “world,” yet carrying a far richer meaning. The term suggests a holistic vision of existence in which all living and spiritual elements remain interconnected. Joseph often refers to the Yup’ik and Cup’ik symbol of a dot within a circle, a visual expression of this philosophy. Within the photographs, landscapes, plants, and changing weather patterns appear as parts of an ongoing cycle rather than isolated scenes. Tundra grasses bend beneath vast skies, waterways reflect the shifting light of long northern days, and the quiet persistence of plant life speaks to endurance within a demanding environment.
The images also emerge from a moment of profound upheaval. In 2025, powerful flooding triggered by Typhoon Halong forced Joseph and residents of the coastal village of Kwigillingok to leave their homes. Nearby communities such as Kipnuk faced similar devastation. In the aftermath of displacement, the artist’s photographs carry the weight of memory and reverence for places that remain deeply tied to identity and community. Rather than presenting dramatic spectacle, Joseph’s work emphasizes subtle beauty: the curve of a shoreline, the delicate structure of Arctic vegetation, the luminous quality of northern light across open water.
Now based in Anchorage, Joseph continues to photograph the landscapes that shaped him. Through patience and quiet attentiveness,
Sacred Ground becomes both a tribute to the enduring spirit of Western Alaska and a meditation on humanity’s relationship with the living world that sustains it.
Image:
Jeron Joseph, Cotton, 2024 © Jeron Joseph