Clayton Sisterhood Project

In Laila Annmarie Stevens’s photo series, Clayton Sisterhood Project, she explores the continuing legacy built by her sisters and nieces from New York, NY moving onto Clayton, North Carolina land together. Inspired by the historical branches of trees on southern terrain and longing for ancestral remembrance through the traditional family album. Stevens utilizes the 1960s Black Arts Movement principle of Self-Determination to preserve documentation of intergenerational Black Women figures across both state territories. North Carolina-based Black Feminist Poet Dr. Alexis Pauline Gumbs states “We knew we had to love the women we were and the women of our lineages, our grandmothers and great-grandmothers, the women we never got to hold, the people coming after us and ourselves and the bridge and an invitation to all of it.” Crossing the boundaries of documentary through a conceptual approach, this visual preservation of love in its varying forms seeks to ensure that the nature of our existence, faces and names will prosper.

© Laila Annmarie Stevens - Image from the Clayton Sisterhood Project photography project
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Shantell Miller (21) stands alongside her grandmother Geneva Adams (73), and mother Jennifer Searls (51) at their neighborhood park at Alley Pond in Bayside, Queens, New York.

© Laila Annmarie Stevens - Miller's passed down family photographs.
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Miller's passed down family photographs.

© Laila Annmarie Stevens - Image from the Clayton Sisterhood Project photography project
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"I could probably count on one hand how many times I’ve even seen my mother cry. Crying means weakness. As I’ve grown up, I definitely feel like my mom has opened up more emotionally, but I do wish I saw it more as a kid so I could’ve learned how to healthily regulate my emotions and so that I could’ve understood her better."

© Laila Annmarie Stevens - Bike Riding in Clayton, North Caroliina.
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Bike Riding in Clayton, North Caroliina.

© Laila Annmarie Stevens - Anais (18) in her aunt's home in Rego Park, Queens, New York.
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Anais (18) in her aunt's home in Rego Park, Queens, New York.

© Laila Annmarie Stevens - Image from the Clayton Sisterhood Project photography project
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Janice Reynolds (74) is the oldest living woman descendant of the Stevens family. She gathers with the family's younger generations in the driveway of her childhood home in South Jamaica, Queens, New York.

© Laila Annmarie Stevens - Grandmother Lillie Coleman (75) in her backyard home in Cambria Heights, Queens, New York.
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Grandmother Lillie Coleman (75) in her backyard home in Cambria Heights, Queens, New York.

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