LOVE ACTUALLY ... COMMON OBJECTS ... DANJOU ... THE BLIND SCANNER ... NO STOP CLASSROOM ... A NATION IS SOMETHING THIN ... DISPLACEMENT AND RESISTANCE ... HARD FOREST ... SHELL CONSTRUCTION ... SHELF LIFE ... ALGORITHMS OF THE VERNACULAR ... THE EVERYWHERE STORE ... NO STOP SHOPPING ... THE END OF BUILDINGS ... THE ROOKERY ... THE CROOKED AND THE STRAIGHT ... BLACKBOX / BORDERLANDS, PART I ... BLACKBOX / BORDERLANDS, PART II ... THE VIRTUAL CITY ... BUILDING CODE ... PENDULUM
New York City’s programs of urban renewal and arterial construction in the mid-twentieth century forcefully displaced large numbers of black and latinx residents and destroyed thriving neighborhoods. In the twentieth century, responding to the killings of unarmed minority citizens—often while in transit— by police officers, the Black Lives Matter movement occupied roads and bridges, disrupting the flows of traffic and capital. This exhibition explores the relationship between these two processes through paired video installations, mounted on a large-scale annotated map of the city.
AFRICAN MOBILITIES: THIS IS NOT A REFUGEE CAMP
GLOBAL AFRICA LAB, WITH IFE SALEMA VANABLE
MUNICH, 2018




