Cara Romero’s
Panûpünüwügai at MOCA Jacksonville presents a decade of photographs that place Indigenous life at the center of the frame. The exhibition gathers images in which Romero combines staged portraiture, documentary references, and commercial-style polish to build scenes that are direct, detailed, and closely tied to Chemehuevi and broader Native histories.
The title means “living light” in the Chemehuevi language, and light functions as more than a visual tool throughout the show. It shapes the figures, sharpens the colors, and gives the photographs their sense of presence. Romero’s subjects are often women and children, shown with a clarity that resists familiar stereotypes. Her work insists on Native identity as current, varied, and firmly rooted in lived experience rather than in fixed historical images.
Several photographs in the exhibition point to land, water, and ancestral memory. In
Hermosa, made during the pandemic, Romero’s daughter stands in the surf at sunset, linking the beach to family history and Indigenous care for place.
Water Memory places Pueblo corn dancers in a submerged landscape, drawing attention to wildfire damage and the changing conditions of water in the Southwest.
The Zenith uses humor and theatrical staging, with a Muscogee Creek painter surrounded by suspended corn, showing Romero’s ability to move between seriousness and play.
Romero, who was born in California and raised between the Chemehuevi reservation and Houston, works from a perspective shaped by both tribal community and urban life. That background gives the exhibition its range: intimate family scenes, symbolic portraits, and images tied to specific geographies all sit together without losing focus. The result is a body of work that treats photography as a way to record, honor, and reframe Native experience.
Organized by the Hood Museum of Art, the exhibition underscores Romero’s place as one of the leading Indigenous photographers working today, with a practice that blends storytelling, technical precision, and cultural memory.
Image:
Cara Romero, Coyote Girl, 2024, archival pigment print. © Cara Romero. Image courtesy of the artist.