Elizabeth Hibbard Photography
Elizabeth Hibbard photographs the emotional architecture between mothers and daughters.
Now based in Los Angeles, Hibbard builds images where family portraiture and constructed scene collapse into one unstable space. Her practice moves through family, gender, performance, psychoanalysis, and the body, asking how photography can mirror the hidden structures that shape intimacy and identity.
Hibbard is interested in what remains outside the frame of the "happy" snapshot. In her work, the camera does not simply record memory. It exposes the pressure beneath it: the roles we inherit, the scripts we repeat, the way femininity is learned through daily gestures and private rituals. Spontaneity and control meet in the same image, giving her photographs a tension that feels both tender and unnerving.
“I grew up alone with her from a young age until college, and we had a very isolated, boundary-less relationship; I didn’t often feel that we were truly separate people in many ways until much later.”
Hibbard's images sit exactly on that line between closeness and separation. They stage personal history without resolving it, allowing the viewer to feel how memory, body, and family mythology continue to perform through the present.
