STELLA DE MONT - THIS LIFE WANTS YOU
THIS LIFE WANTS YOU. This Life Wants You is the debut solo exhibition of American photographer Stella De Mont. The title is not a provocation — it is a proposition, and one that De Mont's photographs make good on with uncommon conviction. Working in landscapes of water, stone, and forest, De Mont makes pictures that locate the sacred in the body's encounter with the natural world. These are not documents of place. They are evidence of something that happened there.
De Mont's practice emerges from her work as an intuitive guide, leading immersive experiences in which participants are invited into states of openness and release. It was within these rituals that she began making photographs — images conceived not as portraits but as reflections, offering back to each subject a picture of themselves liberated from the hierarchies of identity and status. The camera, in De Mont's hands, becomes a kind of witness to what she describes as a direct encounter with the divine.
What results is a body of work of striking formal beauty and genuine spiritual weight. A figure floats in a glacial pool, arms wide, body small against the massive indifference of boulders and jade-green water — surrendered, but also luminous. A woman lies curled on a sand dune at dusk, the full moon burning above her in a wide blue sky, the curve of her back answering the curve of the earth. Throughout, De Mont is drawn to moments when the border between the human figure and its surroundings seems to dissolve — not in romantic idealization, but in something closer to fact.
De Mont is particularly drawn to the feminine as a site of intuition and receptivity, and she often photographs two or three figures together, finding in that small gathering an amplification of communion — bodies acting as extensions of each other and of the earth itself. “We are incredibly sophisticated energy beings, I hope to capture a transmission that is contagious, that makes our bellies soften with peace and belonging.” It is a quality her pictures genuinely carry. They ask something of the viewer — a willingness to be still, to look, to feel the pull of a life that is waiting.