Kéyah photography is a personal project. Kéyah in the Diné language means ‘land.’ Within my intellectual work, geography, land and the making of space and place are of crucial importance. Increasingly, however, I have been dissatisfied with language alone - only talking about land but not experiencing land. Land is not just landscape as in the classic genre in painting and art that represent the natural world without people, especially Indigenous peoples who helped create the landscape. It is the intention of this endeavor, through my photography curated here, to put more emphasis on Indigenous life, either in subject selection, the official naming of places in the photos, or even compositional choices. Life and living is a key part of land. So showing Diné people in everyday play, work, i.e., forms of inhabitance, helps put people back in the land, in place, space, and with hopefully broader political meaning.