All Orchids Are Fine by Nadiya I. Nacorda

Issue 150

My outward perceived identity shifts depending on where I am. I constantly occupy a multilayered and dimensional space in regards to my identity. I own, within myself and my work, that identity is never fixed and capable of true definition.

Nadiya I. Nacorda works in photography, video, and performance to address matters of intimacy, affection and identity, as a child of immigrants and political refugees. In her practice, she draws upon her lived experience and family history to visually articulate notions of Blasian feminine interiority, motherhood, and matriarchy, within the context of domestic life. She engages in multiple photographic modes through the use of vernacular family photos of the past and contemporary portraits, alongside dreamy and playful images that speak to her own subjective internal space as she grapples with questions of selfhood and autonomy as a Blasian woman and a new mother herself. Through a dynamic photographic dialogue between three generations of women that spans 80 years and three continents, Nadiya complicates the assumed linearity of generational lines, suggesting a nuance that is both cyclical and reverberating.

Nadiya I. Nacorda lives and works in Richmond, VA.
www.nadiyanacorda.com | @nadiya_nacorda

 

Untitled #1, 2019

 

Thula Thula Mahal (Hush Hush Love), 2021

 

Gaya Gaya Puto Maya (Copycat), 2018

 

I saw her swallow all her feelings inside her until they ate her whole, 2018

 

Lola and Ninang in 1968, 2020

 

Nana and Auntie Nakazi , 2018

 

They dreamt of us/ A long time coming, 2020

 

Nadiya, Sasha and Nico: Twenty something weeks, 2020

 

All that is an unfathomable thing to do for another human being, 2020

 

I see you being/myself in you, 2020

 

Images © Nadiya I. Nacorda