Skip to main content
Will with bubble wand, Monroe, Louisiana
Will with bubble wand, Monroe, Louisiana

Will with bubble wand, Monroe, Louisiana

Artist Margaret Sartor American, born 1959
Date2000; printed 2005
MediumPigmented inkjet print
Dimensionsimage: 22 × 21 3/4 in. (55.9 × 55.2 cm)
paper: 24 × 29 7/16 in. (61 × 74.8 cm)
frame: 30 1/4 × 30 1/4 × 1 1/2 in. (76.8 × 76.8 × 3.8 cm)
ClassificationsPhotography
Credit LineGift of the artist
Object number2005.17.7
On View
Not on view
Label TextMargaret Sartor has returned repeatedly to her childhood home in Louisiana, to photograph the people and places she grew up with and still feels closely connected to.
As Sartor has written in reference to her work:

Like many southerners, I was brought up with the belief that moving forward in life requires looking back¬—back toward home, that laser point on the horizon by which one learns to clarify the angles and shapes of any new experience. My father called it Proper Perspective.

As a photographer, I have found my way home by returning to the backyards and cotton fields of my childhood, by looking hard at the faces and landscape I’ve known and watched since I can remember. More often than not, however, I have found that making these pictures brings me face-to-face with what I most want to ignore: human vulnerability. Perhaps that’s why I began this series? To face the fact that even the deepest emotional connections are fragile, that though we may yearn for stability, we still live in a world that none of us can predict.

[L. Dougherty, 2007]
ProvenanceCreated Monroe, LA, 2000, printed 2005; collection of the artist; given to NCMA, 2005.
Exhibition HistoryRaleigh, NC, North Carolina Museum of Art, "Contemporary NC Photography from the Museum's Collection," (part 1) September 3-November 5, 2006.

Raleigh, NC, North Carolina Museum of Art, "Prized Possessions," February 20-May 15, 2011.

Raleigh, NC, North Carolina Museum of Art, “Human/Nature,” October 15, 2016–February 26, 2017.

Raleigh, NC, North Carolina Museum of Art, “To Be Young: Coming of Age in the Contemporary” [Part 1], April 3, 2021–September 26, 2021.
Object Rights Statement

The North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA) makes images of its collection available online to support research and scholarship and to inform and educate the public. Certain works of art, as well as the photographs of those works of art, may be protected by copyright, trademark, or related interests not owned by the NCMA. The responsibility for ascertaining whether any such rights exist and for obtaining all other necessary permissions remains with the applicant. To request images and/or permissions from the NCMA, please complete our online request form.