The exhibition brings together a powerful constellation of images that trace the lived realities of people moving across borders, revealing the human stories often overshadowed by political rhetoric. First shown in 1990,
Susan Meiselas’s historic project returns with renewed force, weaving together her documentary photographs from Nicaragua and El Salvador in the 1970s and 1980s and her panoramic views of the US–Mexico border from 1989. These earlier works now converse with more recent photographs taken in 2018, forming a site-specific installation that underscores the persistence of displacement, hope, and resilience across time.
Seen today, these images resonate with unsettling clarity. Immigration enforcement in the United States has intensified, defined by heightened surveillance and militarized strategies that treat movement as a threat rather than a human necessity. Yet Meiselas’s photographs insist on careful looking. They ask viewers to recognize the patterns that repeat across generations and to acknowledge the shared aspirations that transcend geography: the search for safety, possibility, and a future for one’s family.
The exhibition expands further through the works of contemporary artists Monica Lozano, Elizabeth Piñeda, and Griselda San Martin. Their projects illuminate the border as a lived space—one marked by rupture, risk, and profound emotional depth. Piñeda’s tribute to the unnamed dead of the Arizona desert, San Martin’s documentation of a father and daughter separated by metal mesh, and Lozano’s exploration of the moment in which “home” dissolves all reveal stories too often erased or reduced to statistics.
Together, these voices reaffirm that the border is not a single line on a map, but a complex landscape shaped by courage, longing, and endurance. Like Meiselas’s enduring practice, the exhibition invites viewers to look closely, to remember, and to hold fast to the humanity threaded through every crossing.
Image:
Caught heading north along Interstate 5, 10:00 a.m.,
U.S.-Mexican Border, San Diego County, California, 1989, courtesy of Susan Meiselas © Susan Meiselas