At the Griffin Museum, the exhibition
Cassidy Thurber: I Want the Sun to Shine Down on You brings an intimate and deeply personal photographic narrative into focus. Presented in the Griffin Library from May 29 to July 26, 2026, the show marks Thurber as the recipient of the 2025 Carolyn Harder Scholarship, an award dedicated to supporting emerging photographers whose work reflects a profound engagement with art and human experience. Through this presentation, the museum highlights a practice grounded in memory, resilience, and the quiet complexities of family life.
Thurber’s images emerge from her upbringing in rural New Hampshire, where instability and hardship shaped her early years. Her photographs do not attempt to conceal these realities; instead, they transform them into a visual language that balances vulnerability with tenderness. Scenes of siblings, domestic interiors, and fleeting gestures form a fragmented yet cohesive portrait of a shared past. The work resists sentimentality, allowing both difficult and luminous moments to coexist, reflecting the layered nature of lived experience.
Photography, for Thurber, operates as both documentation and reconciliation. By turning her lens toward those closest to her, she constructs a space where memory can be revisited and reinterpreted. The images suggest a process of care, an act of tending to relationships and histories that remain in flux. Small details—light falling across a face, the texture of a room, the presence of absence—carry emotional weight, inviting viewers to connect their own histories to what unfolds within the frame.
The exhibition also resonates with the legacy of Carolyn G. Harder, whose commitment to art as a means of connection underpins the scholarship. Thurber’s work aligns with this vision, offering not only a personal account but also a broader reflection on belonging and identity. Alongside her photographic practice, her involvement in artist book publishing underscores a sustained interest in narrative form and tactile storytelling. At the Griffin Museum, her images open a quiet yet powerful dialogue, where private experience extends outward into shared understanding.
Image:
© Cassidy Thurber