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Adelita Husni-Bey: Chiron

01/22/19-05/05/19

This exhibition by Adelita Husni-Bey (b. 1985, Milan, Italy) marks the artist’s first institutional solo presentation in New York.

Cover Image:

“Adelita Husni-Bey: Chiron,” 2019. Exhibition view: New Museum, New York. Photo: Maris Hutchinson / EPW Studio

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This exhibition by Adelita Husni-Bey (b. 1985, Milan, Italy) presents a new site-specific installation that incorporates some of the artist’s most significant films to date, including the premiere of a major new work, titled Chiron. In her practice, Husni-Bey makes use of noncompetitive pedagogical models to organize workshops and produce publications, radio broadcasts, and archives that form the basis of her exhibitions and films. “Chiron,” her first institutional solo exhibition in New York, takes its title from the Greek mythological figure Chiron, evoking the notion of the wounded healer, and touches on urgent themes such as migration and displacement.

Chiron features members of UnLocal, a nonprofit organization that provides free legal representation to undocumented immigrants in New York City. Throughout last fall, Husni- Bey conducted a workshop with members of the UnLocal team to address oppression, emotional depletion, and the psychological consequences of immigration enforcement in order to examine what it means to “carry each others’ weight.” The film depicts Husni-Bey and the lawyers working through experimental exercises inspired by the Theatre of the Oppressed, a radical theater form developed by Brazilian practitioner Augusto Boal in the 1970s. These include the “siren’s song,” for which the lawyers vocalize the experience of trauma before discussing it, and “dependencies,” for which they are instructed to touch each other’s bodies in destabilizing ways as they struggle to remain standing. The participants use theater and creative writing as means to de-individualize pain and to understand its political ramifications.

Through footage of these workshops, Chiron suggests that the pain and trauma of the immigration process affect not only undocumented people but cause suffering throughout the country and beyond its borders. Excess pain spills over the confines of the self. In this sense, the work aims to uncover the potential for collective healing from within the brutal enforcement of national frontiers and to address how the law weighs differently on different bodies. Considering emotional depletion in the US as a consequence of the country’s foreign policy actions, “Chiron” continues Husni-Bey’s ongoing explorations of the complexity of collectivity and the human and social consequences of imperialist ventures.

This exhibition is curated by Helga Christoffersen, Associate Curator.

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Sponsors

This exhibition is part of a three-year initiative, launched in collaboration with Kvadrat, to premiere ambitious new productions by emerging artists.

Lead support for this exhibition is provided by the International Leadership Council of the New Museum.

Artist commissions at the New Museum are generously supported by the Neeson / Edlis Artist Commissions Fund.

Major support for Chiron is provided by Beatrice Trussardi.

This exhibition is made possible with support provided by the Toby Devan Lewis Emerging Artists Exhibitions Fund.

We are grateful to the Artemis Council of the New Museum.

Special thanks to Q-International

and the Arab Fund for Arts and Culture (AFAC).

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