The United (2020-10-02/2021-01-24)Pittsburgh Glass Center
The United
An exhibition October 2, 2020 – January 24, 2021 examining the complicated topic of immigration which affects many people closely, as members of diverse communities, as descendants of immigrants, or as immigrants themselves
The United (2020-10-02/2021-01-24)Pittsburgh Glass Center
12 Artists
The exhibition with artwork from 12 artists from Belgium, Northern Ireland, Russia and the US explored the possibilities for proactive engagement with immigration issues and offered a message of resilience, hope and resistance.
The United (2020-10-02/2021-01-24)Pittsburgh Glass Center
Johanna Lasner
The exhibition was curated by Johanna Lasner, an independent curator and artist based in White Rock, Canada.
The United (2020-10-02/2021-01-24)Pittsburgh Glass Center
Artists Selected by a Jury
Artists were selected by a jury which included Karla Lamb, a multidisciplinary Chicana poet and artist based in Pittsburgh and Jaime Guerrero, a glass sculptor and mixed media artist from Los Angeles living in Pittsburgh.
The United (2020-10-02/2021-01-24)Pittsburgh Glass Center
Inspire and Come Together
"We hope to inspire and come together as an interconnected active community through participation, by being responsive to current concerns; and even more so, by supporting and celebrating diversity," Lasner said.
The Kitty Army (2019) by Priscilla Kar Yee LoPittsburgh Glass Center
Critical Art is Important
"This project, 'The United,' delves into the question of how critical art may answer to the fabrication of an immigration system that addresses inequality, human rights violations, and exclusion,” said Lasner.
FEATURED ARTISTS
Futile Building (2018) by Najah AlboushiPittsburgh Glass Center
Najah Alboushi
Najah Alboushi is an American-Syrian artist and writer that grew up in the midwest. Alboushi’s work investigates her identity as an American-Syrian woman. An identity she constantly questions, references, and reinvents as she goes.
Seeking Nowhere and Get Closer 1 and 2 (2020-10-02/2021-01-24) by Sanda BacchiPittsburgh Glass Center
Sandra Bacchi
Sandra Bacchi is a Brazilian photographer. She investigates the sense of belonging that immigrants lose when they leave their homeland.
Boiling Point (2018) by Ibraheem BasreePittsburgh Glass Center
Ibraheem Basree
Ibraheem Basree is a 23-year-old glass artist who emigrated to Syria from Iraq and then to the US. His narrative is based on his memories living in Iraq and immigrating to America.
The Three Stupas (2019) by May Maylisa CatPittsburgh Glass Center
May Maylisa Cat
May Maylisa Cat is a multidisciplinary artist who grew up in Chicago. "My work explores the Southeast Asian identity through imported cultural productions, immigration, and intergenerational trauma,” Cat said.
Borders (2018) by Tali GrinshpanPittsburgh Glass Center
Tali Grinshpan
Tali Grinshpan is a glass artist born and raised in Tel Aviv, Israel. “The ever-changing life of the land, in particular that of Israel, where I was born, and that of my present home in Northern California, inspires me," said Grinshpan.
Baachan (2020-10-02/2021-01-24) by Alan IwamuraPittsburgh Glass Center
Alan Iwamura
Alan Iwamura is the glass studio manager at the Toledo Museum of Art in Toledo, OH. He explores glass in its many forms to create artwork that seeks to bridge the gap between the self and ones heritage.
The Kitty Army (2019) by Priscilla Kar Yee LoPittsburgh Glass Center
Priscilla Kar Yee Lo
Priscilla Kar Yee Lo uses glass to convey her ideas and current concerns about the world. ‘Biomythography,' a word coined by American writer and civil rights activist Audrey Lorde, best describes her work.
Luego vinieron por mi (then they came for me)........and there was no one left to speak out for me (2018) by Alexander LozanoPittsburgh Glass Center
Alexander Lozano
Alexander Lozano, also known as Cardoza, is an artist who uses participatory art to bring attention to interpersonal relationships between people, objects and their environments that usually go unseen in a mundane life cycle.
Belfast Girls (2020) by Alison LowryPittsburgh Glass Center
Alison Lowry
Alison Lowry is a glass artist living and working from her studio, "Schoolhouse Glass" in Saintfield, Co. Down. Northern Ireland. She has always been interested in textiles, especially clothing. She says, “Fabric preserves the essence of its maker.”
Huddled Mess (2020) by John MoranPittsburgh Glass Center
John Moran
John Moran is a politically and socially engaged hot glass sculptor, mixed media artist, studio co-founder and operator at Gent Glas. "It is within the contradictions of the politically powerful that my work has evolved,” he said.
Y, Y, Y, How, How, How (2020) by Kris Rumman & Lauren FueyoPittsburgh Glass Center
Kristine Rumman and Lauren Fueyo
Kristine Rumman is an interdisciplinary artist whose work often investigates the possibilities of what art can do that politics cannot. A tragicomic storyteller Lauren Fueyo is an artist, writer, performer, and educator.
The Guides (2020) by Vera SadakovaPittsburgh Glass Center
Vera Sadakova
Vera Sadakova is an engineer in art processing of materials, combining her artistic skills with her technical mind. "In my work, human hands symbolize those people who can be called one common word – migrants," she said.
The United (2020-10-02/2021-01-24)Pittsburgh Glass Center
"The subject of immigration is timely and essential
if art is to remain among the few public hubs where differences in culture, ideology and history can coexist," said Lasner.
The United (2020-10-02/2021-01-24)Pittsburgh Glass Center
"Information & exchange on immigration issues must be honest
where interests, agendas, and concerns of all members of the affected communities are addressed in the context of the collective humanity," said curator Johanna Lasner.
Huddled Mess (2020) by John MoranPittsburgh Glass Center
Improve Human Dignity, Social Justice & Planetary Wellbeing
"We hope to create opportunities for reflection, dialogue & discovery, where awareness can become a form of resistance and luckily generate…more robust, fair & reality-based immigration legislation," said Lasner.
Photographer: Nathan J. Shaulis