Keisha Scarville: Where Salt Meets Black Water transforms the outdoor plaza of the Brooklyn Museum into a contemplative space where photography, memory, and mourning converge. Presented as part of the museum’s UOVO Prize series, the exhibition centers on Scarville’s ongoing exploration of family history, migration, and the emotional residue carried through objects and images. Born in Brooklyn to Guyanese parents, the artist has built a practice rooted in portraiture and assemblage, often using photography to examine grief, absence, and the fragile ways memory survives through material things.
For this large-scale installation, Scarville layers black-and-white portraits and still lifes across abstract textile-inspired patterns drawn from garments that belonged to her late mother. The recurring use of clothing carries particular emotional weight in her work. Fabric becomes both archive and witness, holding traces of intimacy long after the body disappears. Several images stem from her celebrated series
Mama’s Clothes, in which garments once worn by her mother stand in as emotional surrogates, occupying the space between presence and loss.
The exhibition title refers to the mineral-darkened waters found in Guyana, often associated with healing and restoration. Scarville draws on this symbolism to create an environment that feels meditative rather than monumental. Installed across the museum plaza, the photographs encourage viewers to slow down, gather, and reflect collectively. The work connects personal remembrance to larger histories of migration and displacement, particularly within Caribbean and diasporic communities whose stories frequently remain underrepresented in major institutions.
Scarville’s photographic language balances formal precision with emotional vulnerability. Influenced by studio portraiture, conceptual photography, and family archives, she frequently obscures or fragments the body, allowing gesture, texture, and shadow to carry meaning. In
Where Salt Meets Black Water, images appear suspended between dream and document, offering what the artist describes as a threshold space between Guyana and the United States.
As the sixth recipient of the UOVO Prize, Scarville joins a growing group of Brooklyn-based artists recognized for reshaping contemporary visual culture through deeply personal narratives. This installation reinforces photography’s ability not only to preserve memory, but also to create spaces for communal healing and renewed connection.
Image:
Keisha Scarville. Within/Between/Corpus (1), 2020. Courtesy of the artist. © Keisha Scarville