Setanta Books released a new book by Brandon Ruffin. Rooted in personal history and collective memory, Migration Patterns offers a powerful reflection on the enduring presence of Southern Black culture in Northern California, particularly in the cities of Oakland, San Francisco, and Ruffin’s hometown, Richmond.
As a descendant of Louisianans who moved west during the Great Migrati- on, Ruffin explores how culture is carried across distance and time; how it adapts, resists erasure, and remains encoded in language, movement, and ritual. Rather than illustrating history in a didactic sense, Migration Pat- terns moves with a quiet intimacy, allowing traces of Southern identity to surface through atmosphere, memory, and presence.
Woven into the work is a contemplative tension between life and death. Ruffin stands in the stillness of both birth and mourning, asking what it means not only to migrate across land, but also across spiritual thres- holds. In this sense, Migration Patterns becomes not just a document of physical relocation, but a reflection on the migrations we each undergo: into being, into legacy, and eventually, into memory.
The work is especially attuned to the emotional terrain of transition. It considers what is lost and what endures when communities are displaced or transformed, and how those shifts impact one’s sense of belonging. At its heart, Migration Patterns is a reflection on lineage: on what it means to be the continuation of a story, and on the responsibility of documenting that story with care.
With this monograph, Ruffin adds a vital voice to the canon of contempo- rary black photography, one that bridges past and present, personal and communal, silence and testimony.
Brandon Ruffin : Migration Patterns
Setanta Books
Hardback
255 x 200 mm
72 pages
36 images
In a limited edition of 750 copies
Special edition with prints
Each print is in an edition of 20 numbered and stamped copies
Accompanied by a numbered artist label, signed by Brandon Ruffin
Printed on Hahnemühle Pearl paper
Size of “Portrait of Deja” 24 x 16 cm / 9” x 6” in- cluding 1.5 cm / 0.6” white border
Size of “No Trespassing Bus” – 24 x 18 cm / 9” x 7” including 1.5 cm / 0.6” white border














