A Path of Impermanence: life along a highway expansion

A Path of Impermanence: life along a highway expansion is a documentary photo project of the people, places, and landscapes impacted by a large-scale highway expansion in Austin, Texas. The images and interview quotes, collected from March-September 2024, speak to broader themes of displacement, community, memory, and change. All photographs were shot on 120mm film with a medium format camera.

The I-35 Capital Express Central Project is currently underway, the beginning of potentially a decade of construction to widen the main highway that runs through Austin, Texas. It is the largest expansion of I-35 in Austin’s history and more than 50 businesses are being displaced. Many of the small businesses found here have been a part of Austin’s cultural landscape for years. A Chinese teahouse, a beloved local newspaper, a family-owned Mexican restaurant, a crystal and rock shop, a vampire goth lounge, a Spanish-immersion daycare— each of these establishments and more contain their own unique histories and communities, and as I discovered, are often safe third spaces for their patrons. 

While I was doing archival research for the project, I looked through visual records of I-35’s divisive development over the past century, and the absence of people was pronounced. Mainly I noticed the lack of portraits and testimonies of the individuals experiencing and enduring a change in their lives outside of their control. The very communities and identities that have been traditionally neglected and historically underrepresented in archival and artistic spaces. My hope was to produce a thoughtful and nuanced account of what will soon not exist in its current form, and have my work primarily be a vessel through which the stories of those impacted could be witnessed.

In October 2024, I had a photo exhibit of this project at Future Front House in East Austin. The show included photos and interview quotes, as well as site-specific artifacts selected by project participants. The opening night included a panel Q&A between Rosa Fry, Programs Manager at Preservation Austin, and small business owners Alma of Escuelita del Alma, So-Han of West China Tea, and Jay of Cafe Hornitos. Additionally, there was an interactive element where attendees could share their thoughts and feelings via written note cards and place them in memory boxes around the venue. 

Links:

https://www.kut.org/life-arts/2024-10-18/austin-tx-i-35-expansion-photo-exhibit-liz-moskowitz-human-impact

https://futurefronttexas.org/events/2024/lizmoskowitz