The Pink Houseboat
Houseboat Bay in Old Town Yellowknife is one of those places that quietly astonishes you. The people who live there made their homes on the water in large part to avoid paying property taxes — a practical solution that somehow became a community, and then a way of life. They are creative people and resilient ones, shaped by distance, cold, and the particular freedom that comes from living slightly outside the conventional rules.
And then there is the Pink Houseboat. Someone decided, at some point, to paint their home pink. Not blush, not dusty rose — pink. In a place where winter temperatures drop to -30 and the landscape goes white for months at a time, someone chose pink. There is something quietly rebellious about that — a refusal to be subdued by the cold or the landscape or anyone’s expectations of what a home in the north should look like. I admired it enormously.
I never met the person who lived there. I didn’t need to. The houseboat said everything.
Part of my Life in the Knife series, Houseboat Bay, Old Town Yellowknife, Northwest Territories.
This image won an honourable mention at the School of Photographic Art 2019 A+ juried exhibition and another honourable mention at 2018 Honourable Mention in Travel: Places and Faces, Photo Place Gallery, Middlebury VT. Juried by National Geographic Editor and Freelance Photographer Krista Rossow.
Print is 13” x 19.5” - Edition of 10 $525
All prints are hand signed by the artist, numbered and are accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity with a matching hologram.
Larger Sizes also available. (Please enquire.)
Other sizes may be available, please enquire.
Houseboat Bay in Old Town Yellowknife is one of those places that quietly astonishes you. The people who live there made their homes on the water in large part to avoid paying property taxes — a practical solution that somehow became a community, and then a way of life. They are creative people and resilient ones, shaped by distance, cold, and the particular freedom that comes from living slightly outside the conventional rules.
And then there is the Pink Houseboat. Someone decided, at some point, to paint their home pink. Not blush, not dusty rose — pink. In a place where winter temperatures drop to -30 and the landscape goes white for months at a time, someone chose pink. There is something quietly rebellious about that — a refusal to be subdued by the cold or the landscape or anyone’s expectations of what a home in the north should look like. I admired it enormously.
I never met the person who lived there. I didn’t need to. The houseboat said everything.
Part of my Life in the Knife series, Houseboat Bay, Old Town Yellowknife, Northwest Territories.
This image won an honourable mention at the School of Photographic Art 2019 A+ juried exhibition and another honourable mention at 2018 Honourable Mention in Travel: Places and Faces, Photo Place Gallery, Middlebury VT. Juried by National Geographic Editor and Freelance Photographer Krista Rossow.
Print is 13” x 19.5” - Edition of 10 $525
All prints are hand signed by the artist, numbered and are accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity with a matching hologram.
Larger Sizes also available. (Please enquire.)
Other sizes may be available, please enquire.