A Question of Balance, presented at Blue Sky Gallery from April 2 through May 2, 2026, unfolds as a quiet yet urgent meditation on water, access, and inequality in the American Southwest. Through a restrained and attentive photographic language, Elliot Ross approaches a subject often reduced to abstraction—drought—and restores to it a human scale. His images trace the lived reality of communities navigating scarcity, where water is not merely a resource but a daily negotiation shaped by geography, infrastructure, and history.
Working over several years, Ross builds a body of work grounded in proximity and trust. His photographs linger on gestures and environments: containers filled and carried, improvised systems of storage, landscapes marked by absence. These scenes stand in stark contrast to neighboring areas where water flows with ease, revealing a disparity that is both visible and systemic. Rather than dramatizing crisis, Ross adopts a measured tone, allowing the imbalance to emerge through observation and accumulation.
The project situates the current drought—considered among the most severe in over a millennium—within a broader context of land use, policy, and historical displacement. In regions such as the Navajo Nation, access to clean water remains inconsistent despite shared proximity to vital sources. Ross’s work does not isolate these conditions as anomalies but instead frames them as consequences of long-standing structural divisions, where environmental and social realities intertwine.
Visually, the photographs balance intimacy and expanse. Portraits and details draw the viewer close, while wide landscapes emphasize scale and fragility. This duality reflects the central tension of the exhibition: the coexistence of abundance and deprivation within the same terrain. Ross resists easy conclusions, instead inviting a deeper consideration of responsibility and stewardship in a changing climate.
A Question of Balance ultimately extends beyond documentation. It becomes a reflective space where questions of equity, belonging, and sustainability remain open, urging viewers to reconsider not only how resources are distributed, but how communities are valued within the environments they inhabit.
Image:
© Elliot Ross