Artist Statement

Wild is an adjective we often use to describe animals, reflecting the distance separating our civilized lifestyles from the outlying natural world. In Lennette Newell’s Coexist series, the gap between humans and wild animals is diminished, along with any hierarchy that homo sapiens technology has imposed. Each subject, whether animal or human, is equal. However, the human subject could even be seen as subservient, trying to mimic the grace and physical beauty of the animal, yet imperfectly. An observation that is emphasized by the animals’ effortless elegance placed in both a man-made studio and an environmental backdrop. Together, without a spatial barrier, an original relationship unfolds between the animal and the human, a peaceful coexistence that is not exploited by the somatic dominance of the animal, which could, in a time period of seconds, curtail the human’s life. Snapshots of these interactions convey joint persistence, though it is safe to say these interactions do not persist in space and time. The series portrays the certainty that a tranquil co-inhabitance can exist and, therefore, the possibility that it could propagate.