Hannah Cooper McCauley

Hannah Cooper McCauley (b.1989, Tupelo, MS) received a BFA from Jacksonville State University in 2012 and is currently pursuing an MFA from Louisiana Tech University.She enjoys working in narrative photography, both digital and analogue, and her work investigates the curious nature of transition encapsulated within the genre of magical realism. Cooper McCauley’s work has been exhibited in group shows at various venues internationally, including the Houston Center for Photography, the Vermont Center for Photography, Photo Beijing 2014, and the 2014 Pingyao, China International Photography Festival. In 2013, she was awarded the Board of Regents Fellowship at Louisiana Tech University, which serves as a collaboration between the Departments of Art, Engineering, and Science. Cooper McCauley currently lives in Ruston, Louisiana with her husband, Zachary, who is also pursuing an MFA in Photography at Louisiana Tech University.

The Vision, 2014

The Vision, 2014

The Birthday, 2014

The Birthday, 2014

The Drowning Dream, 2014

The Drowning Dream, 2014

The Forest of Zachary, 2015

The Forest of Zachary, 2015

“My life has often felt like one long string of layovers. Because my father is a Baptist minister, my family moved all across the sister states of Mississippi and Alabama from the time I was born and well into college. Because of this, I developed a bemusing mixture of loneliness and imagination. I grew up believing in the fantastic and the probability of miracles. I learned at an early age to accept the things I could not understand, and I feel this has long influenced the method and construction of my imagery.

Because the notion of transition has routinely steered my life from childhood onward, I am fascinated by the many forms it takes even now, as I examine my new identity as lover, wife, and potential mother.

The Wrestling, 2015

The Wrestling, 2015

The Other Mother, 2014

The Other Mother, 2014

The Harvest, 2015

The Harvest, 2015

The Golden Dream, 2015

The Golden Dream, 2015

This ongoing body of work explores the connection I maintain with the temporary. I often feel a combination of frustration and kinship with this facet of my life, and it has invariably instilled a consistent need to both go back through, and move forward into experiences. I make photographs as a way to interpret this desire and investigate my relationship with the ephemeral. Through investigation of family history, mythology, and the notion of memory as interpretation, I aim to demystify my past and fill the void where specific memories were never created, satisfying this curiosity with the opacity of a photograph.”

The Growing Pain, 2014

The Growing Pain, 2014

The Red Sea, 2015

The Red Sea, 2015

The Awakening, 2015

The Awakening, 2015

The Twenty Year Dream, 2014

The Twenty Year Dream, 2014

To view more of Hannah’s work, please visit her website.