Quest Lakes and her family moved out of their house in Silver City after a mining operation posed threats of noise and air pollution, but sheโs still pretty attached to the place. Itโs a DIY assemblage of geodesic domes at the end of a steep, dirt road in this historic town of about 200 residents.
โThis was originally at the UNR campus,โ Lakes said of the oldest dome. โThe art students had built this.โ It originally belonged to her father-in-law, retired University of Nevada, Reno art professor Jim McCormick.
A library nook is stocked with books on Nevada, and the view out a south-ish facing window seems to go forever.
Comfortable and welcoming as the house is, a guest of Lakes wasnโt getting enough sleep, and it wasnโt the mid-August heat keeping her awake. The guest was Frances Melhop, a New Zealander and fashion photographer who lives in Reno. She was one of a string of artists, performers and writers whoโve stayed in the house, which Lakes uses as the living quarters and studio for the Resident Artist Program in Silver City, which she runs.
Melhop was there for a six-day photo shoot. Because her lighting and backdrop equipment is far too large for the dome house, she was working in the historic Silver City School House a few blocks down the road.
She was adding to her series of portraits of Comstock residents. She said she wanted to let her subjectsโ personalities shine through. Compared with shooting for fashion magazines, she said, โItโs like a whole different headspace.โ She sounded downright humbled as she talked about hearing and seeing โsuper amazing stories, super amazing faces. Itโs kind of a mine of amazingness.โ
Hence the sleepless nights. Her subjects, after being photographed, were interviewed by filmmaker Mary Works Covington. Melhop plans to include the recordings along with her photos in a 2017 gallery exhibit. After each day of shooting, sheโd been listening to them late into the night.
โItโs like another whole eight-hour day of recordings, so Iโm listening to them, and itโs just brilliant stuff. The first women who were the firefightersโand some woman who ran herself over with her own car. โฆ Iโm laughing my pants off, and Iโm crying, and I donโt even know half of these people.โ
Visiting artists structure their projects however they like. In Melhopโs case, she was planning to do some mentoring once her shoot wrapped up.
โTomorrow Iโm handing it over to the interns,โ she said. โTheyโre going to work on projects that they want to do. Iโm going to teach them lighting skills, how to measure light, how to do a portrait, different ways of lighting.โ
Participants have come from places such as Michigan and London. Each artist is asked to do a public presentation, whether an exhibit, workshop or performance.
โScott McClough from Oakland, he built three enormous ships out of found objects,โ said Lakes. โOne is on display at St. Maryโs [Art Center in Virginia City] right now.โ
Later in August, a new resident arrived, Dr. David Lee, the poet laureate of Utah. He plans to stay through December to write poetry and teach workshops.
โThereโs something about this space that helps people be creative and produce things,โ said Lakes.
