A LAYIN' ON OF HANDS...
Alayna N. Pernell

Exhibition Dates: September 5th – October 25th, 2025
Festival Reception: September 19th | 5 – 8 PM
In conjunction with the 2025 Filter Photo Festival, Filter Photo is pleased to presnt A layin’ on of hands..., a solo exhibition of work by Alayna N. Pernell.
In A layin’ on of hands..., Alayna N. Pernell explores the cultural and emotional significance of care in the lives of Black women, drawing inspiration from a phrase she often heard growing up in Alabama. In her community, "a laying on of hands" symbolized the transmission of power, healing, and blessing through touch—a love language Pernell has carefully incorporated into her visual practice. Through photography and archival exploration, this exhibition reflects on how the act of care shapes the lives and experiences of Black women.
Our Mothers’ Gardens delves into historical photographic research, offering a broader societal perspective, while for the record intimately explores personal narrative through the act of mending photographs. Together, these works form a nuanced portrayal of the interconnectedness between the historical and personal facets of care—revealing how care transcends individual experience to become a deeply rooted cultural and historical force.
Pernell envisions this exhibition as both a memorial and an honorary space— one that remembers and honors the lives of Black women. These works collectively reveal that care is not just a personal practice, but a force that continues to shape the lives of Black women and the communities they sustain.
About the Artist
Alayna N. Pernell is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, and educator from Heflin, Alabama. She is currently the Associate Lecturer of Photography and Imaging at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She is also a Content Editor for Lenscratch, an online photographic arts publication, and founder of Surely You Know, an archival photographic initiative dedicated to returning displaced photographs to black families. In May 2019, she graduated from The University of Alabama where she received her Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art with a concentration in Photography and a minor in African American Studies. She received her MFA in Photography from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in May 2021. Pernell’s artistic practice considers the gravity of the mental well-being of Black women concerning the physical and metaphorical spaces they inhabit.
She has provided lectures about her work at various spaces including Texas Tech University, Colorado Photographic Arts Center, The Sheldon, and Syracuse University, among others. Her work has been exhibited in various cities across the United States, including FLXST Contemporary (Chicago, IL), Refraction Gallery (Milwaukee, WI), JKC Gallery (Trenton, NJ), RUSCHWOMAN Gallery (Chicago, IL), Colorado Photographic Arts Center (Denver, CO), Griffin Museum of Photography (Winchester, MA), among several others. Her work is currently held in private collections at the Museum of Contemporary Photography and the Illinois State Museum.
Pernell was named the 2020-2021 recipient of the James Weinstein Memorial Award by the School of the Art Institute of Chicago Department of Photography, the 2021 Snider Prize award recipient by the Museum of Contemporary Photography, a 2023 Mary L. Nohl Fellowship Emerging Artist recipient, and a 2024 gener8tor Art x Sherman Phoenix Artist. She was also recognized on the Silver Eye Center of Photography 2022 Silver List, Photolucida’s 2021 Critical Mass Top 50, and a 2021 Lenscratch Student Prize Honorable Mention, among others.
This exhibition is supported, in whole or in part, by federal assistance listing number, 21.027 awarded to Filter Photo by the US Treasury through the American Rescue Plan Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds. This project is partially supported by a CityArts Grant from the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs & Special Events and the Illinois Arts Council Agency. Filter Photo is partly supported by grants from the Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation, The Illinois Arts Council Agency, the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Events, the Fogelson Family Foundation, the Butzlaff Family Fund, and the Henry Nias Foundation.