Library News

Library Exhibition: Painting the Border: A Child鈥檚 Voice

Image Painting the Border

The University Library is pleased to announce a new exhibition in the first floor exhibit cases: Painting the Border: A Child鈥檚 Voice

In an exhibit of 32 paintings produced in August, 2019, in Ciudad Ju谩rez, Mexico, migrant children paint their perceptions of the US/Mexico border.  The children created images of their journeys, fears, hopes, and disillusions.  Their paintings reveal a tenderness not expressed in prevalent border rhetoric, to show the human consequences of US/Mexico border policy. Mostly, the paintings relay the realities of 32 youngsters among more than 281 million migrants worldwide, a staggering number growing as push factors such as war, political unrest, persecution, and climate change, motivate displacement of individuals and families globally.  The young artists stranded in Ciudad Ju谩rez are between the ages of 4 鈥 21 and are primarily  from Guatemala, Nicaragua, Honduras, Cuba, and El Salvador.  They are among more than 19,000 asylum seekers waiting in Ciudad Ju谩rez under the MPP (also known as 鈥淩eturn to Mexico鈥). 

The exhibit Painting the Border: A Child鈥檚 Voice, was a collaborative effort to offer migrant children in Ciudad Ju谩rez a day of respite; a break from the monotony and insecurity of shelter-living and homelessness.  鈥淲e wanted to remind children that they are children, to give them a memory from their experience in Ju谩rez that is loving and positive, so that they know that someone cares about them,鈥 said Lucero de Alba, life-long Ju谩rez resident, children鈥檚 author,  and volunteer.

The 2019 project was initiated by Diana Barnes, a Skidmore Senior Teaching Professor in the Department of World Languages & Literatures, and organized in Juarez by Alba, a World Organization for Peace representative.

It will be on display in the University Library through April 27.

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