Aylette Jenness revisits her journeys to Alaska and Nigeria and her later life as she settles in New England, finding insight and meaning in her past as her physical sight fails due to macular degeneration.  

Sometime a Clear Light: A Photographer’s Journey Through Alaska, Nigeria, and Life.

In Sometime a Clear Light: A Photographer’s Journey Through Alaska, Nigeria, and Life,  Jenness reflects on living with her husband and two small children in a tiny Yu’pik village in  Alaska in the early 1960s, and on the time they spent in Africa from 1966 to 1969, three of the  most terrible years of the Nigerian Civil War (the Nigerian-Biafran War). It was a tumultuous  time for Aylette, as well, as she split from her husband, an anthropologist, who had been sent to Nigeria to study resettlement driven by the construction the Kainji Dam.  

She follows her evolution as a single mother, an author of eleven children’s books on diverse  cultural groups, and as a self-taught photographer. Her photographs of the Fulani, Sarkawa,  Kamberi, and Hausa people of Yelwa, Kainji, and Ibadan, which capture a lost way of life, are  now are housed in the "Aylette Jenness Collection" at the Smithsonian’s National Musuem of  African Art.  

Aylette Jenness, now 87, looks back into her past to find insight and a  clear light.