Stories of Global
Displacement
June 22 - September
22, 2019
The Warmth of Other
Suns: Stories of Global Displacement will be open to visitors for extended
hours on Friday, September 6, 13, and 20 from 5-8:30 pm.
This D.C. exhibition
should be seen by everyone concerned about the migrant crisis.—The Washington
Post
The Museum is the
Refugee’s Home. Without exiles and émigrés there is no modern culture. A new show in Washington maps a century of art and displacement.—The New
York Times
Turning away is what we do now—from the
terrible realities of this global displacement we're living through. Far from
our shores and right on our borders, art like this . . . can turn us back.—NPR
The Warmth of Other Suns: Stories of Global
Displacement presents 75 historical and contemporary artists—from the United
States as well as Algeria, Bangladesh, Belgium, Brazil, Egypt, Ghana, Iraq,
Lebanon, Mexico, Morocco, Syria, Turkey, UK, Vietnam, and more—whose work poses
urgent questions around the experiences and perceptions of migration and the
current global refugee crisis.
Through
installations, videos, paintings, and documentary images, The Warmth of Other
Suns explores both real and imaginary
geographies, reconstructing personal and collective tales of migration.
Overlaying historical experiences of migration to and within the United States
with the current plight of refugees around the world, the exhibition brings
together a multitude of voices and exposes the universality of migration as an
experience shared by many. The exhibition also focuses on how artists bear
witness to both historical events and more subtle shifts in cultural
landscapes.
Borrowing a line
from author Richard Wright (1908–1960), and sharing its title with Isabel
Wilkerson’s award-winning book on the Great Migration, The Warmth of Other Suns
is anchored by an important reference to the decades-long exodus of over six
million African Americans from the brutality and discrimination that ruled the
American South. Selections from Jacob Lawrence’s powerful Migration Series
(1940-41), a cornerstone of The Phillips Collection, will be among the
historical works featured in the show.
The Warmth of Other
Suns is curated by Massimiliano Gioni and Natalie Bell in partnership with the
New Museum, New York, and based on the exhibition The Restless Earth, which was
shown at the Triennale in Milan in 2017.
https://www.phillipscollection.org/events/2019-06-22-exhibition-the-warmth-of-other-suns
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