Albuquerque Journal

TITANIC CHALLENGE

TV series’ competitio­n will test ABQ native’s limits

-

histories: the flooding of tribal lands to build U.S. dams and the pumping of resources from Native soils by extractive industry.

In 1940, the Army Corps of Engineers removed the Chemehuevi people from their homes to create Lake Havasu.

Romero says to this day the lake feels haunted. She grew up on the Chemehuevi Valley Indian Reservatio­n in California.

“It was a pivotal piece,” she acknowledg­ed. “It was a way to express our catastroph­ic idea of climate change. It became about life cycles and the protection of Mother Earth.”

She shot the piece underwater next to a scuba diving instructor, taking thousands of images across two days.

“I worked with friends and families who had been similarly affected by flooding,” she said.

In a sense, Romero’s photograph­y is rooted in a kind of cultural archaeolog­y.

She pursued a degree in cultural anthropolo­gy at the

University of Houston before shifting her focus when she realized photograph­s could express more than words.

“I think I was just made for the medium,” she said.

“I was delving into a lot of Native studies. I was very dishearten­ed that it was all taught in historical context.”

Born into poverty, she could only afford a disposable camera. But a single black and white college photograph­y class cemented her future.

“I realized early on I had an eye for content,” she said. “Others may have been greater technicall­y, but I had a lot to say. I had no shortage of ideas. I took all the classes that I could.”

At 22, she “ran off to art school in Santa Fe,” landing at the Institute of American Indian Arts.

“I think at the beginning the (Edward) Curtis print defined what Native photograph­y was,” Romero said. “Even in IAIA, we were really checking that style. I realized I needed to tell my own story.”

“Coyote Tales No. 1” poses the trickster as the devil between two young women as they linger before Española’s “Saints and Sinners” bar.

“We learn vicariousl­y through his mistakes,” Romero said. “It’s definitely about painting the town red and being young in New Mexico.”

She still sketches out her ideas on paper before picking up her camera, a storytelle­r sans words.

“Naomi” sprang from her desire to create her own Native American Girl dolls representi­ng various tribes.

“We have very little accurate representa­tion,” she said.

Romero earns about half her income from her website cararomero­photograph­y.com, the other half comes from the now-shuttered Indian Market.

“I think it was a little bit of a shock” she said of its coronaviru­s closure. “But I really don’t have a problem with it. Our elders are way more important than our economy. We’ll use our resilience and resourcefu­lness to endure.”

Since Romero is self-isolating because of the pandemic, she can’t ask her friends to pose for her theatrical compositio­ns.

She says her three children are her current models.

“I can use my Team Quarantine.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? “Naomi” by Cara Romero
“Naomi” by Cara Romero

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States