Humid Traces, presented at the Ford Foundation Gallery from February 19 through June 20, 2026, brings water to the forefront as both subject and witness. At a moment defined by rising temperatures and intensifying climate instability, the exhibition examines how rivers, seas, and wetlands become charged sites where migration, memory, and power intersect. Water is shown not as a passive backdrop, but as an active force shaping human movement and redefining political boundaries.
Across immersive installations, soundscapes, photography, video, and data-driven works, the exhibition reveals how attempts to control water—through borders, infrastructure, and extraction—ultimately expose its resistance to domination. Water carries histories within its currents, absorbing traces of displacement, labor, and survival. In doing so, it undermines rigid systems that seek to define who may cross and who must remain, suggesting alternative ways of understanding territory as fluid rather than fixed.
The participating artists, drawn from diverse geographic and cultural contexts, approach water as both material and metaphor. Their works trace coastlines, riverbeds, and migratory routes shaped by colonial legacies, environmental degradation, and contemporary policy. Whether documenting contested waterways or visualizing unseen flows, these practices reveal how bodies of water become mirrors of global inequality while also holding the potential for shared responsibility and collective care.
Curated by Federico Pérez Villoro, the exhibition is grounded in sustained research into political ecologies and technological systems. His long-term engagement with border rivers and access to freshwater informs the show’s emphasis on water’s shifting morphology and its capacity to redraw maps. Rather than presenting definitive answers, the exhibition invites viewers to listen, observe, and move alongside water’s rhythms, recognizing its agency and its role as an archive of lived experience.
Ultimately,
Humid Traces proposes water as a connective medium—one that links distant geographies through common vulnerability and resilience. By following its flows, the exhibition gestures toward new forms of solidarity that emerge not from imposed lines, but from shared dependence on a resource that refuses to be contained.
Image:
Zishaan A Latif. The Edge, 2023. Courtesy of the Artist. © Zishaan A Latif