Elliot Ross: American Backyard
@ Filter Photo
1821 W Hubbard St, Chicago, IL 60622
Opening Friday, December 6th, from 6PM - 9PM
On view through Saturday, January 4th
American Backyard
Elliot Ross
December 6, 2019 – January 4, 2020
Filter Photo is pleased to present American Backyard, a solo exhibition of photographs by Elliot Ross.
Among many, many other things, the post-election political climate of 2017 offered a stark context for confronting cultural difference within the United States. In many ways a crucible, it suddenly brought into high focus the integrating and fragmenting processes that bind this country togetherâand then divide it againâto form new ideological patterns or lapse back to old ones. The U.S.-Mexico border is one such facet of the revolving national psyche. As an issue, it tends to resurface at fashionable times for nationalism, isolationism, and xenophobia. Americaâs Backyard is a concept often used to refer to the international sphere of influence of the United States, particularly with regard to Latin America. Over the last century, the U.S. government has made multiple pushes to secure its border with Mexicoâan impulse triggered by perceived threats to American society such as immigration, communism, the AIDS epidemic, and turmoil in South America. Despite enormous changes in our social makeup, cultural attitudes, and demography, the border keeps creeping back into our national dialogue
Meanwhile, the cultural institution of the âbackyardâ in postwar American society is a strong symbol of the nationâs desire for freedom through private domain, security, and domestic prosperity. Despite enormous changes in our social makeup, cultural attitudes, and demography, a commonly held aspiration for U.S. citizens (and immigrants) is to have a property of oneâs own to put a fence around.
Through an amalgam of portraiture and topographical studies of infrastructure imposed on the landscape, American Backyard looks at the reality of American lives on the border. Various cultural and political processes, which may be ambiguous elsewhere in the country, are amplified at the border. In an environment where the movement of both people and goods are vigilantly regulated, examined, and controlled, and where Federal laws regularly donât apply, questions of social injustice and discrimination are matters of resounding consequence. Beyond talk of The Wall, there is a larger, less transparent story to be told about our Borderlands to do with creolization, acculturation, surveillance, diversity, and compassion.
Copies of the corresponding publication, American Backyard, which features essays by Genevieve Allison, will be available for purchase at the opening reception.
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