Binh Danh & Renee Royale brings together two distinct yet deeply interconnected artistic voices in a compelling exhibition presented at ROSEGALLERY from March 14 through April 25, 2026. Through photography and material experimentation, both artists investigate how histories of colonialism, labor, and environmental transformation continue to shape contemporary understandings of identity and place. Their works reveal the ways memory persists within objects, landscapes, and cultural narratives, encouraging viewers to reflect on the enduring impact of historical power structures.
Binh Danh’s series
All I Asking for Is My Body offers a thoughtful meditation on the legacy of plantation labor in the United States and the Pacific. Drawing inspiration from Milton Murayama’s novel of the same name, Danh revisits archival photographs depicting the lives of immigrant laborers—Japanese, Chinese, Filipino, Korean, Portuguese, and African workers who formed the backbone of agricultural industries during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Using the historic daguerreotype process, Danh transfers these images onto antique silver platters reminiscent of colonial dining culture. The reflective surfaces transform the objects into mirrors that subtly include the viewer within the frame, linking present observation with the overlooked histories of labor and displacement embedded in these scenes.
Renee Royale approaches similar questions of history and belonging through ecological processes and ritual. In her series
Landscapes of Matter, photographs made with a Polaroid camera depict locations in Louisiana affected by environmental degradation tied to long histories of extraction and exploitation. Royale subjects the prints to a deliberate transformation, submerging them in water, soil, and plant matter during the course of a lunar cycle. The images absorb the marks of time and environment, producing surfaces that appear both fragile and elemental. Through this process, the land itself becomes an active participant in the creation of the photograph.
Royale continues this exploration in
Rituals of Belonging, a body of work created along the shoreline of Lake Michigan. By returning repeatedly to the same vantage point and allowing lake water to alter the images, she develops a meditative inquiry into the meaning of belonging and exclusion. Together, the works of Danh and Royale reveal how landscapes, materials, and bodies carry traces of unresolved histories, offering photography as a space where memory and reflection converge.
Image:
Bridalveil Falls, Yosemite, (May 31), 2012 © Binh Danh, courtesy of the ROSE Gallery