SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- American immigration policy can be read as a history of anti-Asian bias from the Chinese Exclusion Act that closed borders more than a century ago to the current administrations Muslim Ban. On view until June 10, Testimony provides an intimate, years-in-the-making account of the impact of these policies. An installation of photographs and text by San Francisco-based artist Eliza Gregory, Testimony foregrounds the lived experiences of ten documented and undocumented immigrants in the Bay Area.
The men and women chronicled in Testimony DREAMers, refugees, entrepreneurs, from Asia, Latin America, and Europe share their coming-to-San-Francisco stories through largescale portraits, ephemera, and long-form interviews. Like the affidavits, family photos, and personal documents that support an official visa application, Gregorys installation inverts the box-checking of government legal forms to create subtle, moving portraits of her subjects: a legible testimony that is also profoundly human.
Testimony offers counterpoints to the contemporary, deeply troubled dialogue around immigration. When examined through the lens of individual experiences, so many of our policies seem not just bad, cruel, or inefficient but truly absurd, says Gregory. What seems clearest to me is that we need a new approach, a new angle, a new set of ideas to engage the issues raised by human movement between nations. We desperately need to start asking different questions. And listening to the answers.
Curated by Senior Educator for Public Programs Marc Mayer along with Caren Gutierrez, Associate Director of Education and Interpretation, Testimony is an outgrowth of Mayers popular Artist Drawing Club series. For five years, Mayer has worked closely with the local creative community to organize original time-based art exhibitions and performances on-site at the museum. Starting together in 2014, Mayer and Gregory collaborated on programs and the publication of a 2015 book based on Gregorys Artist Drawing Club project that would grow into Testimony .
Testimony has always been about building relationships. I was curious about what a longerterm, socially engaged artist project in a museum could look like, explains Mayer. The subjects come from Elizas own life, connections she made with organizations that work within these communities, and the result is a sensitive and timely exploration into the San Francisco immigrant experience at multiple levels, from the mundane to the cutting. As one participant put it, even immigrants get their hearts broken.
By providing historical context within a specific cultural framework, the modern story of the immigrant in American society is one that we are uniquely poised to tell, says Asian Art Museum director and CEO Jay Xu. Testimony underscores how art, in every age, transforms the political into the personal in the most unexpected and therefore the most powerful ways.
The Asian Art Museum is the only venue for Testimony . Testimony is organized by the Asian Art Museum and funded in part by the California Arts Council, a state agency.