Catalogue > At random

Susannah Sayler, Edward Morris

The Amazon is Elsewhere

Experimental film | 4k | color and b&w | 12:0 | USA | 2025

Amazon is Elsewhere is a short film that mediates on the unknowability and power of the Amazon for those who do not live within it. For many, the Amazon symbolizes “the lungs of the earth” or “nature” itself. For the indigenous people of the region, many of whom have no separate word for jungle or forest, it is simply home. The film centers around a building on the edge of the jungle: a mélange of architectural styles where trees break through the concrete floors; plants grow in the faux Corinthian columns; and jaguars made from ceramic tiles guard the entrance. AI-generated images express forces at play in both the building and the jungle that are difficult to parse as being malevolent or redemptive. The film is part of a body of work that considers how to represent the Amazon in light of its multiplicity of refracted meanings.

Susannah Sayler and Edward Morris (Sayler/Morris) work with video, photography and installation to examine our changing notions of nature, culture, and ecology. Their work is often place-based and focused on historical research. They have been awarded numerous fellowships including the Guggenheim Fellowship (2023) New York Artist Fellowship (2016), the Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship (2014), the Center for Art and Environment Research Fellowship (2013), and the Loeb Fellowship at Harvard Graduate School of Design (2008). Their work has been exhibited broadly in the U.S. and internationally, including at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, the Kunsthal in Rotterdam, the North Carolina Museum of Art, the Belvedere Museum, and the Southeast Center for Contemporary Art. Sayler currently teaches in the Film and Media Arts Department at Syracuse University, while Morris is Executive Director of Marble House Project. Their archives are collected by the Nevada Museum of Art / Reno, Center for Art and Environment. In 2006, Sayler/Morris co-founded The Canary Project, a studio that produces visual media and artworks that deepen public understanding of climate change. In 2021, they founded Toolshed, a platform for connecting ecological thought and action.