In 2016, more than one million people fled Asia, Africa and the Middle East to arrive in Europe. It was a continent largely unprepared (or unwilling) to take on the challenges of helping refugees and migrants adjust to life in a new land. While the news was filled with devastating images of sunken ships, sick children and desolate camps, few of the individual stories behind the headlines ever reached the outside world.
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When invited to curate an exhibition to East Wing, a photography platform founded in Qatar, Artistic Director Peggy Sue Amison decided it was time “to uncover the ignorance.” This led to In Transit, a multidisciplinary group exhibition of artists including George Awde, Daniel Castro Garcia, Gohar Dashti, Tanya Habjouqa, and Stefanie Zofia Schulz — who themselves are refugees, immigrants, and first-generation citizens.
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In Transit takes us to Germany, Jordan, Lebanon, Italy, and Iran to look at the day-to-day lives of men, women, and children trying to survive in a foreign, often hostile world. “We’re not trying to solve a problem,” Amison explains. “The exhibition gives these migrants a face and puts the viewer in their position in an intimate way.”
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