Compassion: What Moves You?, presented from January 31 through October 25, 2026 at the Michael C. Carlos Museum, invites visitors to reflect on one of the most fundamental human values: compassion. Organized in collaboration with the Emory Center for Contemplative Science and Compassion-Based Ethics, the exhibition forms part of a broader university initiative exploring how empathy and ethical awareness shape individual and collective life. Through photography, installation, theater, and interactive spaces, the exhibition encourages viewers to consider what motivates acts of care, understanding, and responsibility toward others.
Photography plays a central role in this exploration. Among the featured artists is Shingo Kanagawa, whose ongoing
father series investigates the emotional distance between himself and his father. The images often portray the older man partially obscured or framed through reflective surfaces, emphasizing the difficulty of fully knowing another person. These intimate photographs evoke the quiet complexities of family relationships and the longing for connection that lies at the heart of compassion.
The exhibition also includes the immersive installation
If Your Life Were Light by the Japanese collective ARu, Inc.. Through streams of light synchronized with the rhythms of the human heartbeat, the installation visualizes the idea that every individual life is interconnected. Visitors encounter an environment where personal presence becomes part of a shared visual experience, suggesting that compassion emerges from recognizing our mutual dependence.
Other sections of the exhibition examine compassion within contexts of conflict and historical struggle. A segment of
The Water Station by playwright Ota Shogo appears alongside materials recounting the story of Richard Moore, who lost his sight during the violence of the Northern Irish Troubles yet later became a powerful advocate for reconciliation. Additional works by photographers such as
Danny Lyon and
Manjari Sharma explore identity, memory, and the human desire for belonging.
Visitors conclude their journey in the Compassion Lab, a reflective space designed for dialogue and contemplation. By combining art, storytelling, and participation,
Compassion: What Moves You? transforms the museum gallery into a place where personal reflection meets collective awareness, encouraging deeper engagement with the emotional ties that connect people across cultures and experiences.
Image:
Shingo Kanagawa (Japanese, b. 1981), father. 2009-present. Inkjet prints mounted on dibond. Courtesy of the artist.