Clay achieved
national attention in 1999 with the
publication of Delta Land (University
Press of Mississippi), a collection
of sepia photographs from the land
she has lived in most of her life,
for which she received the Mississippi
Arts and Letters award in 2000. Clay
started focusing on dogs in the context
of Delta landscapes when she was working
on Delta Land. Four of the 25 photographs
of dogs in her new exhibit appeared
originally in Delta Land, including “Dog
on a Log, Tallahatchie County, Mississippi,” shown
here.
According to
Clay, “To me, these dogs are
part of the Delta’s landscape — as
integral to the landscape as the
cypress trees, the swamps, the tenant
houses or the field churches. Over
the past six or seven years, as I
rode around the Delta looking at
the landscape, I kept seeing dogs,
so then I started looking for them.
This exhibit is like Delta Land,
but with a compelling canine presence.”
Clay, a fifth-generation
Deltan, was born in Greenwood. She
attended the Memphis Academy of Arts
and apprenticed with her cousin,
photographer William Eggleston. By
1975, she was living in New York
City and working at the Light Gallery.
She returned to live in the Delta
in 1987, and in 1993, she began to
take black-and-white photographs
of the Delta landscape.
Her photographic
work has appeared in Vanity Fair,
Esquire, the New York Times Magazine,
The London Observer Magazine, Mothers
and Daughters, Women Photographers
and other books. Some of Clay’s
work is housed in the permanent collections
of the Museum of Modern Art, the
Museum of Fine Arts-Houston and the
National Museum of Women in the Arts,
in Washington, D.C.
The exhibit
will hang through the end of July.
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