Photography & Art Objects
Prairie Earth Home begins with photography—quiet observations of land, material, and light captured with intention.
The photographic collection is organized into four ongoing series: Surface, Still Ground, Illuminated, and Interventions. Together, they explore texture, landscape, atmosphere, and the subtle relationships between natural and built environments.
Over time, Prairie Earth Home will grow into a broader offering of thoughtfully curated objects for living, resting, gathering, and care—spanning photography, fiber art, textiles, artful objects, furnishings, and everyday rituals.
Each addition will be introduced slowly, with the same attention to material, provenance, and feeling.
Photography — Jamaica Jones
Jamaica Jones is a photographer whose work centers on land, light, and the quiet presence of place. Her images are rooted in observation rather than spectacle—capturing moments that feel weathered, held, and deeply familiar.
Across her practice, Jones explores how environments shape memory and atmosphere through restraint, natural light, and minimal intervention.
The work is organized into four ongoing series—Still Ground, Illuminated, Surface, and Interventions—each examining landscape, light, material, and the subtle relationships between natural and built environments.
Illuminated captures moments when light briefly transforms the ordinary—street corners, buildings, and familiar landmarks revealed at dusk or nightfall. The series explores how illumination alters perception, creating intimacy, reverence, and pause within everyday environments.
Still Ground documents the enduring landscapes of the Flint Hills and surrounding prairie—open land held in suspension between movement and rest. These photographs reflect steadiness, silence, and the sense of being anchored to something older and ongoing.
Interventions documents moments when objects, installations, or built gestures enter the landscape and shift how a place is perceived. Temporary structures, artistic interventions, and unexpected forms create quiet disruptions within otherwise familiar environments.





























