My Old Friend Death

Available September 1st - 30th

 

 
 

Music & Film

by Nat Evans

Mail Art

by Janelle Iglesias

about the art

When you are born – you cry – but the whole world is overjoyed

When you die – the world cries – but you may find the great liberation

— so the world took turns crying today, it seems, and every day —

– Tibetan Book of the Dead

Through film and sculpture, Nat Evans and Janelle Iglesias consider death not only as a personal passage, but as a planetary one. Endings—of lives, of species, of ecological balance—reveal the interdependence between human histories and the natural world. In their own ways, each work asks how we reckon with what is lost, and how that reckoning might change the way we live.

My Old Friend Death, a film by composer and sound artist Nat Evans, draws on the prairie ecosystem as a lens through which to explore mortality, climate change, and family history. Using a collage of spoken text, video, music, and imagery from Nat’s midwest family archives, Nat moves between the intimate and the vast, from his personal history to a view of the natural world in flux. The soundtrack, performed by cellist Lori Goldston and guitarist Will Hayes, threads these elements together into a meditation on the inevitability—and necessity—of death in the cycles of life.

Janelle Iglesias’ sculpture, Crab, depicts a crab shell embedded with plastic straws, bringing together the organic and the synthetic in a quietly unsettling way. Central to Janelle’s practice is the way objects speak—how their histories, politics, and poetics intersect. The materials in Crab, collected during her walks along the beaches of Southern California, hold stories of place and the natural world colliding with the human one. In this work, the delicate shell and the discarded straws connect with Nat’s film to articulate shared grief for a natural world under strain and a recognition of the complications that human life brings to these places.