Queens Museum announces fall exhibition - Fia Backström: The Great Society
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, August 20, 2025


Queens Museum announces fall exhibition - Fia Backström: The Great Society
Fia Backström, "Appalachian Wilderness, after Porter," 2018/2025. Pigment print on transparent film. Courtesy the artist.



NEW YORK, NY.- In Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Philomela finds herself held captive in a rural site, her tongue severed by her abuser. Voiceless, she embroiders scenes of her plight on tapestries. These embroideries might be one of the first predecessors to documentary photography. Using photography and embroidery as recording tools, Fia Backström’s The Great Society explores how communities take shape and survive in the face of converging environmental and extractive crises. The exhibition is based on extensive field research in West Virginia, where the artist began traveling and meeting with locals in 2017. Backström responds to the area’s photographic history, government hearings, and community embroidery practices through her own material and computational processes that include photography, videos, language, and textiles.

The Great Society takes its title from a 1960s social policy aimed at combating poverty and racial injustice, championed by the same U.S. president who stated: “if you can convince the lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re picking his pocket.” Statements like these perpetuate the conflicts between race and class that persist to this day, with comments such as “baskets of deplorables,” only deepening barriers to solidarity. For Backström, West Virginia functions much like a repressed unconscious, a zone of extraction onto which projections of “backwardness” and “trash” abound. A central touchstone for the work is the Buffalo Creek mining disaster of 1972, when a coal slurry dam collapsed and killed hundreds, left thousands homeless, and the land toxic. The mining company blamed “God’s hand,” while the community became the subject of psychiatric studies on collective trauma. Up the mountain from Buffalo Creek is Blair Mountain, where in 1921, miners marched in the largest labor uprising in American history. Beyond their heavily surveilled exteriors, the mines’ cavernous spaces of fossilized darkness conjure possibilities for resisting, concealing, and creative healing.

Backström’s experiments with language and image are both indexical and speculative. In a fragmented form of visual docu-poetry, the artist addresses the complex relationship between photography and trauma. Days Without Lost Time Accident, a photographic series of signs outside the mines in Buffalo Creek, shows how injured workers are quantified against efficiency. The exhibition’s large-scale display mechanism, Sacrifice Zone, recalls the infrastructure of the West Virginia industrial landscape and pushes the limits of visibility with a constellation of layered, hand manipulated prints on transparent film. Backström also invited members of the Buffalo Creek community to participate in an embroidery circle as an act of bearing witness. In search of a photographic ethic, she weaves together testimonies of folk medicine practitioners, scholars on faith and dam regulation, strip mining activists, and the spirits of the mountains.

Fia Backström: The Great Society is organized by Lindsey Berfond, Assistant Curator and Studio Program Manager with Hitomi Iwasaki, Director of Exhibitions and Head Curator.

Fia Backström (b. Stockholm, Sweden, 1970) agitates the social life of language and materials through her work in photography, writing, installation, and performance. Her practice maintains a longstanding inquiry into the glue of collectivity. Recent projects include The Great Society at Brief Histories, New York (2024), The last of US—that safe space above I in the word life at The Kitchen, New York (2022), and Facing Her Land – notes from elsewhere, Thielska Museum, Stockholm (2019). She has participated in group exhibitions at Greater New York, MoMA PS1, New York (2015), Museum of Modern Art, New York (2010), the Whitney Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2008), Moderna Museet, Stockholm (2010). Backström was the subject of a survey at the Artist’s Institute (2015) and represented Sweden in the Venice Biennale (2011). Her work is in the collections of Moderna Museet and the Whitney Museum. Backström lives and works in New York.










Today's News

August 18, 2025

Artemis Fine Arts' auction features global Indigenous art treasures from collection of Santa Fe's Ralph T. Coe Center

Unparalleled masterpieces of European decorative arts to be shown at the Frick

Ugo Rondinone presents a fleet of black ships at Madoo Conservancy

Altered States: The Etchings of Richard Pousette-Dart at the New Britain Museum of American Art

El Museo del Barrio announces 'Coco Fusco: Tomorrrow, I Will Become an Island'

Hammer Museum announces 28 artists for Made in L.A. 2025 Biennial

Cristin Tierney Gallery will show works by Judy Pfaff at Independent 20th Century

Taschen releases Graphic Design. 1890-Today

Berggruen Gallery presents Matt Kleberg's new geometric abstractions

Mendes Wood DM opens Varda Caivano's inaugural New York solo exhibition

Six artists bend and reshape familiar forms in new group show

Bluerider ART's new exhibition explores poetry and emotion through color

Five Native American artists' works on view at Shelburne Museum

Queens Museum announces fall exhibition - Fia Backström: The Great Society

"Coming Home" by Bay Area artist Ryan Carrington in the Art Kiosk, Redwood City, CA

Australian painter Euan Macleod explores the UK landscape in new exhibition

Friedrichs Pontone explores light and shadow in group exhibition

Armenian Museum of America announces an exhibition of works by System Of A Down's Serj Tankian

Gary Gissler's "Against Interpretation" challenges viewers to look beyond the surface

Exhibition features seven paintings by Shawn Huckins with a playful, contemporary twist

Nerman Museum to launch new monograph on ceramic artist Linda Lighton

Yorkville Murals Festival 2025 returns as Toronto's ultimate summer send-off




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 





Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez



Abogado de Accidentes
Attorneys Near Me
Truck Accident Attorneys
Houston Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful