President Biden is expected to announce new policy today which will grant undocumented spouses of US citizens a pathway to citizenship, protecting certain individuals from deportation, and providing work permits. Officials briefed on the conversations said it could affect up to 500,000 undocumented spouses. We will update as news develops.
Immigrants From the Past
“In Mortal Repose” by Diana Al-Hadid
On 27th street in Manhattan sits a woman melting away. Sculptor Diana Al-Hadid’s installation, “In Mortal Repose,” is displayed by the Kasmin Gallery just off the high line for viewers to enjoy.
“In Mortal Repose” depicts a woman slowly melting and dripping down the side of a concrete pedestal. All that remains intact is the woman’s torso and feet, with her feet fallen below. Notably, the woman’s head is missing. Al-Hadid described her process, explaining that she does not look at heads as she sculpts, because the head is the “only thing on your body you can’t really see.” The sculpture is a welcome addition to New York’s landscape and offers viewers a chance to reflect on the self, forever disintegrating, growing, and evolving.
A Dream Called Home
“Unframed” By JR
Photos by Andrew Markey
Ellis Island, the famed entry point for millions of nineteenth-century American immigrants, is offering an exhibit that welcomes visitors to a part of the island that was abandoned and closed to the public for over fifty years. “Unframed – Ellis Island” by French street artist JR guides visitors on a hard hat tour through the long-abandoned Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital.
“Unframed” brings to life the real people who passed through the immigrant hospital a hundred years ago. For the installation, JR combed through archival photos that were taken in the hospital a century ago. From there, he installed the photos onto the structure of the hospital itself, floating doctors over the surgical theater, crowding immigrants onto the walls of the waiting room, and placing nurses along the halls. The installation breathes eerie life into those who once passed through the hospital’s halls, searching for a new life in America.
Immigration is the Solution
Welcome Summer
Photo by Kathleen D
As May comes to a close, the sun is officially rising on the summer season. We are kicking off summer by visiting the beautiful beaches on Long Island. Robert Moses State Park is a particular favorite with Long Island locals, offering glorious sunrises and sunsets over the Atlantic Ocean.
We had to share this picture a surfer friend captured in the early morning of the sun peeking out behind the iconic water tower. We are so ready for you, summer!
Farewell to What You Knew
“On Growth” by Kapwani Kiwanga
“On Growth” by Canadian artist Kapwani Kiwanga is one of the latest additions to the public art on display on the High Line. The colorful sculpture uses architecture and horticulture to create artwork inspired by marginalized or forgotten histories.
Known for her work that explores gender, colonialism, and the African diaspora, Kiwanga drew inspiration for this sculpture from Wardian cases, early versions of terrariums, which were used in the late nineteenth century to transport plants from around the world to Europe. “On Growth” depicts a fern enclosed in an intricately crafted case that glimmers with dichroic glass. Depending on where you stand, the special glass plays with the light that passes through, transforming its colors and tones. The installation will be on display on the high line until October.
