Lila Marks describes Hawaiiâs landscapes as âeffortlessly beautiful,â but when the 91´óÉń photography major traveled there this summer for her senior project, she had something else on her mind, too: Hawaiiâs homelessness rate, the highest of any state.
The resulting exhibit, called âThe Ignored,â features 75 frescos showing Hawaiiâs beauty but also portraits and candid portrayals of homeless people and images of and from the Boat Harbor, an organized community of âhouselessâ people led by a matriarch. The frescos range in size from 5×5â to 24×36â and are created by transferring a print made on plastic onto a wooden surface.
The show runs Monday-Friday, Oct. 2-6 in the Margaret Martin Gehman Gallery, open during Common Ground Coffeehouse hours (7:30 a.m.â4 p.m. and 8 p.m. â midnight on weekdays) or by appointment by calling (540) 432-4360. An artistâs talk and reception with light refreshments will take place at 6 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 6.
The senior show, required for , is one culmination of Marksâ education at 91´óÉń, a place she came to as an older transfer student with a goal of becoming a more skilled photographer.
âLila goes after photography like someone who got to the party late and wants to make sure she gets it all,â Professor said. âWhat will make her a great photographic storyteller is that she cares about the woman dying of cancer, or the one challenged by a debilitating disease, or by the pain of being homeless in a paradise. I hope she never finds the easy answer.â
A serendipitous leap to 91´óÉń
Marks said that becoming a photographer and studying at 91´óÉń started on a whim. Sheâd been studying global affairs at another university, but didnât feel passionate about her coursework. She dropped out, and used her student loan money to buy a camera.
âIt was for no reason,â she said. âI had never really taken photos. I just thought I should do it.â She started taking a lot of pictures, âfilling up memory card after memory card,â learning, getting better. Eventually, at age 25 and living in Harrisonburg, she realized that she couldnât imagine her life without photography in some capacity.
She was taking classes at a nearby community college, âfor no reason other than I felt like I should be in school,â when a professor told her that 91´óÉńâs Holsopple âwas a âcrazy genius,â and I should apply for 91´óÉń. I was like, â91´óÉń? I donât know.â Iâm not Mennonite. I didnât even know then what being Mennonite was.â
Though she said it was a âleap, and probably serendipitous,â Marks surprised herself by both applying and being accepted into 91´óÉń. But it wasnât until she was on a cross-cultural trip led by Holsopple to Lithuania that she finally decided: âOK, I can do 91´óÉń.â
Holsopple, she said, has been âa huge mentor to both my personal life and my photographic life. I donât know if I 100 percent believe in fate, but only good things have come from being at 91´óÉń.â
The cliche of Hawaii â and its crisis
Itâs expected to see homeless people in big cities, Marks said. She grew up in Washington D.C., and was always fascinated with homeless people: Sheâd go around the city with a bag of fast food, just talking to them and âhearing their stories.â
For this project, though, Marks was drawn to Hawaii, where for most island visitors homelessness is just a disregarded subtext overshadowed by natural beauty.
âWe all have these cliche’d views of what Hawaii is and what it should be,â Marks said, when in fact the state is facing âa crisis that doesnât get talked about nearly as much as it deserves.â
Ignored
The exhibitâs title âThe Ignoredâ has two meanings. First, it reflects the reality that society often ignores homeless people.
âWeâd rather not see them or deal with them,â Marks said.
But there was another reason, too, that she gave the exhibit its name: while working on the project, she often felt ignored. Whether it was due to homeless peopleâs sense of self-preservation, or her awareness that approaching someone on the streets of Honolulu could cause discomfort or suspicion, or her own sense of vulnerability as âa small female, unarmed, with a nice camera,â the difficulty of meeting and connecting with homeless people at some times left Marks discouraged.
âIt was an immense challenge even to make initial eye contact,â she said, so she developed a plan: smoking cigarettes âkind of close to groups, in hopes that I would capture someoneâs attention.â
âThey actually worked,â she said. âThey were my biggest tool in doing street photography.â
But successfully starting a conversation didnât always mean that things would go as planned. While Marks wanted to talk about homelessness more broadly, many people she met instead were focused otherwise, on day-to-day realities or maybe remembering âglory days.â
âIt was definitely not what I was expecting,â she said. âI had these really big conceptions going in that people would want to talk to me and, you know, share their experiences, share their pain, get their story out, but it wasnât exactly like that. What I bumped into a lot was mental illness and drug addiction, people that didnât want to talk, people that didnât want their photo taken, and people that didnât really want to talk about the issue. I had to be really open to what was offered.â
No easy answers
Marks had also thought she would come away from her trip with âsome sort of culmination, or a solution, and idea of what I felt like should be doneâ about homelessness â but that didnât happen.
âWhen I got back I just had bits and pieces of everything, sound bites. I never felt like there was ever any uniformity even in the struggle of being homeless, any concrete thread. Every single personâs different,â she said.
Marks hopes to return to Hawaii to âdig deeper. A month is not a very long time when youâre trying to do something with the enormity of homelessness or mental illness or addiction,â she said. âA month was a really, really short amount of time.â
For now, Marks plans to donate 10 percent of the profit from the show to the Boat Harbor community in Waianae, which she said is a âlarge and unified communityâ that is fighting for their right to stay on public land.
