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Win a Solo Exhibition in April 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!
Win a Solo Exhibition in April 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!

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By Richard Hay Jr.

Publisher: Kehrer Verlag
Publication date: June 2026
Print length: 112 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
Richard Hay Jr.: Resounding with Echoes unfolds as a quiet passage between continents, tracing subtle correspondences between West Africa and the Americas during the 1970s. Moving fluidly between black-and-white and color, Richard Hay Jr. composes a visual dialogue grounded not in spectacle, but in the poetry of ordinary life. Streets, storefronts, interiors, and open landscapes emerge without fixed captions, allowing viewers to linger in the ambiguity of gesture and setting. Rather than reinforcing familiar narratives of hardship or exoticism, Hay’s lens rests on shared human rhythms shaped by local textures and global exchange.

His journey to West Africa began after working within an African Studies program at Northwestern University. With a used Leica camera, a backpack, and limited film, he traveled from coastal regions to Kano, Nigeria, photographing with the same attentiveness that marked his earlier road trips across the United States and Mexico. The influence of the New Topographics can be felt in his restrained compositions and interest in human-altered environments. Hay’s approach is observant yet intimate, revealing how architecture, clothing, signage, and posture quietly register histories of migration, trade, and aspiration.

The historical currents between West Africa and the Americas—shaped by centuries of forced displacement and later by renewed cultural exchange—form an understated backdrop. Hay does not illustrate these histories directly; instead, he attends to their traces in everyday scenes. An ocean apart and decades removed, the places he photographs seem to mirror one another in rhythm and repetition, as though bound by invisible threads of memory.

An essay by Emmanuel Iduma frames the work with reflective insight, situating the images within broader conversations on continuity and change. Together, photographs and text invite slow looking. Resounding with Echoes proposes the camera as a tool of patient witnessing, where each shutter click collapses time and the present moment becomes part of a longer, reverberating story.

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