Ilisa Barbash is Curator of Visual Anthropology at Harvard University's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, where she makes films, writes, and curates exhibitions on photography. She has taught ethnographic film production and the history and theory of ethnographic film at San Francisco State University, UC Berkeley, and the University of Colorado Boulder.
Sweetgrass
Sweetgrass
Sweetgrass
An unsentimental elegy to the American West, Sweetgrass follows the last modern-day cowboys to lead their flocks of sheep up into Montana's breathtaking and often dangerous Absaroka-Beartooth Mountains for summer pasture. This astonishingly beautiful yet unsparing film reveals a world in which nature and culture, animals and humans, vulnerability and violence are all intimately entwined.
Lucien Castaing-Taylor: 'We were living in the Rockies and were interested in the so-called New West, especially the changes wrought by yuppification, with all the neo-homesteaders — rich hobby farmers — moving in and buying up the land as a playground for their kids and guests for a few weeks every summer. It was a chance, or a challenge, for us to engage anew with "salvage ethnography"— how to represent a world on the wane — something that's been considered totally retrograde within anthropology since the 1960s. Could we acknowledge a historical loss without falling prey to all the pitfalls of patronising romanticism and nostalgia?’
— Excerpted from Scott MacDonald, 'Conversations on the Avant-Doc: Scott MacDonald Interviews', FRAMEWORK: The Journal of Cinema and Media, Vol. 54, No. 2, Fall 2013

Lucien Castaing-Taylor, born in 1966 in Liverpool, is a British anthropologist and filmmaker. He teaches at Harvard University and is the director of the Sensory Ethnography Laboratory. Seeking to conjugate art's negative capability with an ethnographic attachment to the flux of life, his work has been widely exhibited at major film festivals and institutions, and is held in the permanent collections of MoMA and the British Museum.

