(UN)SEEN, on view from March 13 through May 17, 2026 at RedLine Contemporary Art Center, brings together photographs of Colorado Palestinian families created by local artists. The exhibition confronts a paradox of our moment: Palestinians are constantly present in headlines and public debate, yet their daily lives and full humanity often remain obscured. By focusing on intimate portraits and domestic scenes, the show shifts attention away from spectacle and toward lived experience.
The photographs resist reductive narratives that cast Palestinians solely as victims or threats. Instead, they reveal parents preparing meals, children doing homework, elders sharing stories, and families gathering in living rooms filled with heirlooms and memory. These images speak to continuity—of language, food, faith, and intergenerational ties—while acknowledging the strain of distance from homeland and loved ones. They suggest that identity is not suspended by displacement; it is carried, practiced, and renewed in everyday gestures.
Many of the families portrayed live with a dual awareness: the routines of work, school, and neighborhood life unfolding alongside the persistent ache of grief and uncertainty abroad. The exhibition underscores that war and loss are not abstract events happening “elsewhere,” but realities that ripple outward into local communities. In grocery stores, classrooms, and workplaces across Colorado, neighbors quietly bear the weight of fractured geographies where memories of home coexist with images of rubble and upheaval.
Installed with care and restraint,
(UN)SEEN invites viewers to slow down and look closely. What changes when we allow complexity to replace caricature? What becomes visible when we approach with curiosity rather than assumption? In foregrounding presence over stereotype, the exhibition aligns with RedLine’s commitment to art that fosters dialogue and expands representation. Ultimately, the photographs ask not only to be seen, but to reshape how seeing itself might become an act of recognition, responsibility, and shared humanity.
Image:
Shrapnel. © Malek Asfeer