As Land Remembers
ROLE
CuratorYEAR2025
An exhibition tracing how artists engage land as collaborator, kin, and witness to history’s turning cycles
The heart of Denniston Hill is its campus in Sullivan County, NY—over 200 acres of farmland, forest, and wetlands traditionally tended by the Esopus people of Lenapehoking. For nearly 20 years, its residency program has provided a refuge for artists from around the world to live, build new ideas, and create work in deep relationship with the environment. To be in residence at Denniston Hill is not only to create in place, but to participate in its ongoing making: tending gardens, sharing meals, walking the land, and joining in a collective rhythm of care. In this context, the rural is not marginal but a reflection of the mutual dependence of all living beings within a common world. Here, the land is a field in every sense: of tall grasses and milkweed, bees and wind, interwoven lifeforms and relationships—but also a field of shared inquiry. It is an active participant in the process of making and remembering.
As Land Remembers extends the ethos of Denniston Hill into the gallery, bringing together artworks grounded in ecological attunement and relational practice. The artists do not treat land merely as a backdrop, but engage it as collaborator, teacher, kin, and witness to cycles of history, extraction, and regeneration.
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Reciprocal entanglements with place are central to Denniston Hill, where working in deep relation to its rural context opens new pathways for creation. Textile works by Carolina Caycedo and Annalee Davis extend this commitment to relation, engaging with land as a living presence. Las Nietas de Nonó’s video-performance unfolds as a visual and somatic reflection on the tension between ancestral practices and extractive forces. Nancy Brooks Brody’s series extends this thread of relation through its quiet rigor and fugitive hues. Through works by Nikita Gale, Ei Arakawa-Nash, william córdova, and American Artist, landscapes emerge as constellations of ideas and temporalities. julie ezelle patton’s work improvises poetics rooted in ecological care and community-based reclamation. Lorna Williams, Deborah Anzinger, and Marcela Torres turn to land as praxis. Through painting, ceramics, performance, and sculpture, they engage land as a generative force that shapes how they make, heal, and transmit knowledge.
Together, the artists in As Land Remembers engage a field shaped by the very conditions which place makes possible—and impossible. Like Denniston Hill itself, a site of refuge and shared study, where experimentation, stewardship, and interdependence guide the work of building more liberated futures. In a moment when crisis and catastrophe dominate our sense of what’s possible, these works echo Denniston Hill’s quiet commitment to a different tempo: one that counterbalances the demanding rhythms of cultural production by valuing the often-invisible aspects of artistic processes. Here, land is not just a place to make, but a companion in imagining otherwise.
¹SYLVIA WYNTER, “UNSETTLING THE COLONIALITY OF BEING/POWER/TRUTH/FREEDOM,” NEW CENTENNIAL REVIEW 3, NO. 3 (2003): 257–337.
²SEE KATHERINE MCKITTRICK’S DEMONIC GROUNDS (UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA PRESS, 2006) AND HER EDITED VOLUME ON BEING HUMAN AS PRAXIS (DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2015) FOR HOW WYNTER’S CRITIQUE OF “MAN” REVEALS THE RACIALIZED PRODUCTION OF SPACE AND OPENS TOWARD BLACK GEOGRAPHIC ALTERNATIVES THAT UNSETTLE COLONIAL DEFINITIONS OF THE HUMAN.
³LAURA PULIDO, “LANDSCAPES OF RACIAL VIOLENCE,” IN LATITUDES: AN ANGELENO’S ATLAS, ED. PATRICIA WAKIDA (BERKELEY: HEYDAY BOOKS, 2015), 63–71.
²PRESS RELEASE