“say the dream was real and the wall imaginary” Exhibition

Jane Lombard Gallery

poster for “say the dream was real and the wall imaginary” Exhibition
Tom Molloy, Boat (detail), 2017, Thirty-five color photographs, Dimensions variable. Courtesy of the artist.

This event has ended.

make it happen
finish the thought
say the dream was real and the wall imaginary
because we need you to build more road
for all of us to walk on
because participation
because witness
because history

—Richard Siken, “Why,” 2013

Jane Lombard Gallery presents say the dream was real and the wall imaginary, a group exhibition curated by Joseph R. Wolin, that brings together eight artists who investigate walls, borders, and boundaries—both physical and ideological—and ways to think beyond them. The exhibition, featuring work by Margarita Cabrera, Anita Groener, Tom Molloy, Ambreen Butt, Becci Davis, Spandita Malik, Azita Moradkhani, and Kanishka Raja.

Walls—whether delimiting rooms, dwellings, cells, properties, territories, nations or lines of jurisdiction—are designed to separate. Walls divide us; they confine us within and fence others out. But, as walls were created by us, we can imagine a world where they don’t exist. As Richard Siken’s poem suggests, we can dream past walls, because we must.

Each artist featured in say the dream was real and the wall imaginary is in some way confronted with the blunt facts of enforced division. As such, their work not only considers the presence of walls, but how to transcend them, dreaming of futures that lack borders.

Margarita Cabrera (Mexico/U.S.) and Anita Groener (Netherlands/Ireland) create works that look at borders between countries, focusing on the individuals who left their home countries in search of refuge and opportunity. Cabrera’s ongoing series, Space in Between, explores the politics of the national border between the United States and Mexico, collaborating with recent immigrants to create soft sculptures representative of their own experiences with crossing borders. Groener’s sculpture and video works explore symbolic deconstructions and reconstructions of home, through both personal narratives and those of communities facing displacement due to violence.

Tom Molloy’s (Ireland/France) Borderline plays with the signs and implications of demarcations and boundaries. Ambreen Butt’s (Pakistan/U.S.) series Say My Name, abstract compositions made from the names of children and teenagers killed by U.S. drone strikes on either side of the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, constitute acts of remembering individual young lives snuffed out as “collateral damage” in the never-ending War on Terror. Becci Davis’s (U.S.) three-channel video Isaiah’s Inventory/Searching for Junior, foregrounds a gesture of un-writing history as she transcribes the estate inventory of a nineteenth-century Southern slave owner, her fifth great-grandfather, whose property includes her fourth great-grandmother and her children, and runs the footage backwards.

Spandita Malik (India/U.S.) shoots portraits of Indian women restricted to their homes in small villages, collaborating with the subjects through regional styles of stitching and embroidery, which they deploy according to their own desires and ideas about self-presentation. Azita Moradkhani (Iran/U.S.) considers the distortions of patriarchal structures, focused on her native Iran, in delicate drawings that merge fancy lingerie with scenes of cultural archetypes and political protest. Painter Kanishka Raja (India/U.S.) merges airports, shopping malls, corporate lobbies, tony domestic interiors, computer hubs, shantytowns, refugee camps, and flooded cities with frenetic abstraction, predicting an unpeopled world, half dystopia, half fever dream, that eerily parallels the actual condition in which we live today.

Collectively, the artists in say the dream was real and the wall imaginary not only ask viewers to examine the effects and meanings of walls as tools of division, but also to imagine ways to dismantle them. Through their work we can dream new prospects for a future without borders.

About Joseph R. Wolin

Joseph R. Wolin is an independent curator and critic and the Consulting Curator and Editor at the Museum of Art and Design at Miami Dade College. He is a contributor to Border Crossings, Frieze, Glasstire, Time Out New York, and other publications, and was the co-curator of MOAD’s Living Together, a yearlong series of exhibitions, performance art, concerts, and other events held at venues across Miami during 2017–18. He teaches in the MFA Photography programs at Parsons School of Design and Lesley University.

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Schedule

from March 11, 2022 to April 23, 2022

Opening Reception on 2022-03-11 from 17:00 to 19:00

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