Episode 14: Josephine Sacabo Tells a Story of Her Journey Toward Transcendence and Connection

Josephine Sacabo didn’t set out to be a photographer. As a child, she wrote poetry and fantasized about becoming a great poet. Later, she acted in theater.

A native of Laredo, Texas, she entered UT, but did not feel comfortable in that ambience. She wanted to go somewhere “away,” which she did when she was accepted to Bard College. There, she met her future husband, Dalt Wonk, a playwright and poet, and felt among “her people.” They moved to Europe where they started Bird in the Hand Theatre Company, and they lived between Paris and London. A friend suggested they see a house in southern France, and though they had not intended to purchase anything, they fell in love with the place and bought it for an astounding $1200.  

At the house, Josephine found a camera left in one of the drawers. She worked with an English friend, a student of Henri Cartier-Bresson, and learned the Cartier-Bresson style of documentary photography. “I was good at it from the beginning.” It was a style she used when she moved to New Orleans and began a series on the French Quarter. Although she felt she “caught life in a fresh way,” she was concerned, after she got to know the Quarter better, that she was adding to the misery she had come to see in the lives of her photographic subjects.

All images courtesy of the artist.

 

Man & Woman in Sunlight

She found a studio behind the Napoleon House restaurant, and she turned to photography with greater self-expression. All her work, she says, is inspired by literature, and as she read Rilke’s Duino Elegies, she photographed a “beautiful couple.” A beauty and sensuality of the couple emerges, not unlike the sensuality of Rilke’s elegies. Here, she deepened her journey toward transcendence and connection, which all of her arts seeks. 

 

Sacabo eschews any chasing after artistic fashion in favor of diving into what she loves. In this way she connects with those who view her work. The many layers of her work evoke layers of being, some disturbing, yes, but ultimately transcending such disturbance to “come full circle” with compassion and beauty.

 
 

Josephine Sacabo’s complete portfolio is available on her website.

 

Working with her husband and her longstanding model and book-designer, she creates books through Luna Press so that people can return to her work time and again—more than they could by attending a gallery exhibition. In these books, she hopes to connect with people for years to come.  

Josephine appeared in a panel discussion hosted at the National Gallery of Art along with 21st Editions’ founder and publisher Steven Albahari, production manager Pam Clark, and typographer Crissy Welzen. The conversation was moderated by the National Gallery’s special collections librarian and curator of the exhibition, Yuri Long.

The National Gallery of Art celebrated the 25th anniversary of publisher 21st Editions with an exhibition in the library: Photography and the Book Arts from the 21st Editions Collection, on view May 6 – August 29, 2024. Gilded Circles and Sure Trouble: The Art of Josephine Sacabo and Keagan LeJeune is included in the exhibition.

Signed, limited edition photographs are available. For more information please contact A Gallery for Fine Photography.

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Episode 15: Meryl Truett’s Story of Excavations

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Episode 13: Artists Telling Stories 2024 Extended Trailer