Current Work

2025-ongoing


Artist Statement
I got a call from my brother last Thursday. The Baba Yaga was outside his window, staring at him from the yard; it's been over a decade since he saw her last. It’s August now, and his first child, Aiden, was born a few weeks ago. As a protective ritual, he’s been sprinkling salt on every windowsill and placing selenite crystals atop every doorframe. Since having Aiden, he’s become much more fearful and vigilant in response to the occult activity that seems to haunt his life. I’m not sure what to make of the Baba Yaga, or of the demon that tried to possess him three years ago, but I believe his stories, and in his perception of reality.

Through examining anecdotal experiences with the occult, alongside a practice of studying, chasing, and attempting to conjure shared phenomena and myth, this body of work distorts and plays with the line in which belief waivers and bleeds between truth and fiction. Photographs confirm our existence, validating what we deem as real, but they are merely a reflection of our individual perception, and similar to memory, a faulted fragment of what “truly” was. Using the camera as a questioning device, and as a tool to both document and fabricate reality, I challenge the notions of what is and isn’t, and whether or not supernatural forces are present.

However, to confirm what may be seen as subjective or unknowable feels somewhat futile. Instead, the process of making this work follows the desire for both myself and the viewer to open themselves up to considering the reality of what may seem inexplicable. I’m focused on the process of image-making in connection to deep empathy, and by reflecting upon, listening to, and relating to phenomena and myths, I explore their tethers to perception. I create images that speak to that gesture and attempt to hold onto the encounter’s latent essence and embodied experience. Similar to my process of making, I see this work as an invitation for the viewer to consider and to empathically enter my or another’s “world,” as photography is intrinsically tied to subjectivity and bound to the maker’s cognition. By nature, engaging with a photograph is an act of empathy, entering another’s “world,” sitting with, considering, and relating to their perception.


©Jake Benzinger
©Jake Benzinger