400 N. Ashley Drive
ALT TAMPA, on view at the Florida Museum of Photographic Arts from April 29 through June 14, 2026, turns its lens toward a side of the city that rarely appears in promotional imagery. Moving beyond the polished surface of waterfront developments and tourist landmarks, the exhibition reveals a layered cultural landscape shaped by music, nightlife, and decades of alternative expression. At its center is the work of Jesi Cason, whose portraits bring visibility to communities that have long existed at the margins.
Tampa’s reputation as a crucible for death metal forms part of this story, but the exhibition extends further, encompassing a wide network of subcultures—from goth and punk scenes to rave communities and independent creatives. These groups, often overlapping, have cultivated their own spaces, rituals, and aesthetics, forming what might be described as a parallel city. Cason’s photographs approach these environments not as curiosities, but as vital ecosystems grounded in identity and belonging.
Working in a direct and intimate style, Cason produces portraits that emphasize individuality while acknowledging a shared cultural framework. Her subjects meet the camera with confidence, vulnerability, or defiance, each image reflecting a personal negotiation with visibility. The use of vivid color and deliberate staging reinforces this sense of agency, suggesting that self-presentation itself becomes a form of authorship.
At the same time,
ALT TAMPA does not overlook the broader forces shaping the city. Rapid development and rising costs increasingly place pressure on the informal venues and neighborhoods that have sustained these communities. In this context, the photographs take on an additional layer of urgency, documenting not only people but also the fragile infrastructures that support their ways of life.
By foregrounding voices and spaces often excluded from dominant narratives, the exhibition expands the understanding of what defines a city. Cason’s work insists that culture does not reside solely in official institutions or sanctioned histories, but also in the lived experiences of those who create meaning on their own terms.
Image:
Jesi Cason, Eliana, 2026 © Jesi Cason