Anastasia Samoylova: Atlantic Coast 

Anastasia Samoylova: Atlantic Coast presents a new body of work in which the artist traces the enduring complexities of American identity through a contemporary lens. Inspired by Berenice Abbott's 1954 project documenting the historic U.S. Route 1, Samoylova embarks on her own photographic journey from Key West, Florida, to Fort Kent, Maine, examining the national landscape as a site of both mythmaking and fracture.

Through a combination of color and black-and-white documentary photography, Samoylova captures the layered interplay between the natural environment, human intervention, and the pervasive forces of political ideology, capitalism, and mass consumerism. Rather than orienting the viewer geographically, she constructs a visual narrative shaped by recurring phenomena and shared symbols, revealing how nostalgia operates as a tool in the ongoing negotiation between reality and idealized memory.

Atlantic Coast is a project of profound social and historical resonance, offering a timely meditation on the construction of place, the search for authenticity, and the longing for a newly imagined America, whether inspired by hope, apathy, or indignation. Samoylova's work invites viewers to consider the landscape not merely as backdrop but as a mirror reflecting the contradictions and aspirations of the national psyche.

Adding further local resonance, the Norton Museum of Art has stood on U.S. 1 — known locally as Dixie Highway — since its 1941 foundation, both witness to and participant in the road's unfolding story. The Norton is honored to welcome Samoylova as one of our 2025-26 Artists-in-Residence.

Anastasia Samoylova: Atlantic Coast was organized by the Norton Museum of Art. 

Sponsored in part by the Board of County Commissioners, the Tourist Development Council, and the Cultural Council for Palm Beach County; the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Arts and Culture.