The Day After Tomorrow

  • Dates
    2024 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Location Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Kitts and Nevis

This work confronts the abandonment of my paternal family's ancestral home, bearing witness to its transformation and paying homage to its history. It examines the fallout of complex family dynamics and the relationship between nature and time.

The Day After Tomorrow is part of a project that explores family legacies and loss in the Caribbean. Since returning to Nevis in 2024, I have been uncovering aspects of my family history and collating narratives that keep a record of our past.

The house at Brown Pasture was constructed in the 1920s by my great-great-grandfather and is one of the few remaining examples of colonial-style architecture in Nevis. It was originally built as his retirement home, then used as a church before being passed down in the family. No formal inheritance was set after my great-grandmother's death, and there was no clear plan for the future of the property. After family members eventually moved away, no one had the means or was there to invest in the upkeep.

While pursuing this project, I have learned that this pattern of property neglect is not uncommon on the island in cases where families have moved (often abroad) and have no interest and/or financial support to ensure these houses are maintained. Moreover, as the colonial-style wood and stone structures are no longer endorsed for insurance funding by banks, this style of architecture is rapidly being replaced by bank-approved concrete homes. As a result, these architectural histories are slowly being lost to time.

I hope my work can help to preserve the memory of these places and experiences, while embracing the fact that all things ultimately belong to and return to nature.

© Danielle Sargeant - The now overgrown bush once used to be a well-tended yard full of fruit trees, sheep and hens.
i

The now overgrown bush once used to be a well-tended yard full of fruit trees, sheep and hens.

© Danielle Sargeant - The cellar. Its entrance is on the left side of the house, which is no longer accessible due to the overgrowth.
i

The cellar. Its entrance is on the left side of the house, which is no longer accessible due to the overgrowth.

© Danielle Sargeant - Image from the The Day After Tomorrow photography project
i

The back room. It is not safe to enter the house due to the weakened foundations; however, the back room is visible through an open door.

© Danielle Sargeant - Image from the The Day After Tomorrow photography project
i

The back room. It is not safe to enter the house due to the weakened foundations; however, the back room is visible through an open door.

The Day After Tomorrow by Danielle Sargeant

Prev Next Close