Paul Kariouk and Mabel O. Wilson’s “(a)way station” to Show at SFMOMA
June 16, 2022
The exhibition takes place July 16, 2022–May 21, 2023. More Information on the SFMOMA Site
(a)way station: the Architectural Spaces of Migration will be exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA). Created by Paul Kariouk and Mabel O. Wilson, the project is even more relevant today than when it was constructed in 1999, because the number of people who have been forced to leave their homes has more than doubled.
“Home” is a powerful idea. Our homes provide not only shelter, but also become an extension of our identities. For people fleeing conflict, persecution, or poverty, life becomes a series of temporary way stations between places of despair or danger, and what they hope will be a place of safety and prosperity.
(a)way station engages people’s imaginations and memories, helping them get a sense of what it’s like to compress an entire family home into something that can be easily carried. Unlike the temporary transition of a vacation, this is an experience of being uprooted on a deeper level — something many of us would consider disturbing or even traumatic.
We know how well-designed architecture can make us feel. We’ve all walked into beautiful museums, art galleries, libraries or even homes that have inspired and uplifted us. (a)way station asks us to consider the confinement and disconnectedness felt by refugees and migrants who occupy cramped, temporary spaces that they cannot call their own.
Something as small as a refugee shelter or as modest as low-income housing is still architecture. But like 99% of the built environment, these spaces don’t get captured by top photographers and displayed in beautiful magazines. (a)way station surfaces these unsung spaces, and helps us experience the poignancy of undervalued things that become important when they’re left behind.