Nate Lemuel: Land and Love brings together a body of work grounded in the vastness of the Navajo Nation and shaped by a deeply personal relationship to place. Presented from September 4, 2026 to February 28, 2027, the exhibition unfolds as a meditation on distance, memory, and belonging. Lemuel, a Diné photographer from Shiprock, New Mexico, approaches the landscape not as backdrop but as a living presence—one that holds history, continuity, and quiet forms of transformation. His images stretch across open terrain, where horizons remain uninterrupted and time loosens its grip, allowing each frame to exist in a suspended state between what is and what could be.
Working across portraiture, stop-action, and stylized editorial forms, Lemuel constructs visual environments that feel both intimate and expansive. Figures appear within these spaces not as isolated subjects, but as extensions of the land itself. There is a deliberate merging of body and environment, where fabric, movement, and gesture echo the contours of desert, sky, and stone. This synthesis creates a subtle futurism rooted in Indigenous knowledge, suggesting continuity rather than rupture. The images resist fixed timelines, offering instead a sense of cyclical presence where past, present, and imagined futures coexist.
Lemuel’s upbringing on the Navajo Nation informs his understanding of scale and perception. The distances between places, often measured not in minutes but in feeling, translate into compositions that emphasize openness and possibility. His fascination with environmental science and his connection to his grandmother’s farm surface in attentive details—light touching soil, wind shaping texture, the quiet rhythm of growth and care. Through these elements, the work reflects an ethic of respect toward the land, recognizing it as both origin and guide.
Land and Love centers on affirmation and resilience, focusing on moments of calm, beauty, and hope within Indigenous experience. Rather than revisiting narratives of loss, Lemuel shapes a visual language of presence and continuity. His photographs offer a perspective where the sacred and the everyday remain intertwined, and where imagining the future becomes an act of honoring what has always been there.
Image:
© Nate Lemuel