A! Magazine for the Arts

Richard Misrach, Wall, Jacumba, California, 2009, pigment print, image: 60 × 80 inches, framed: 61 × 81 × 2 inches. Courtesy the Artist. © Richard Misrach, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco.

Richard Misrach, Wall, Jacumba, California, 2009, pigment print, image: 60 × 80 inches, framed: 61 × 81 × 2 inches. Courtesy the Artist. © Richard Misrach, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco.

Border Cantos I Sonic Border opens at Asheville museum

July 19, 2022

"Border Cantos|Sonic Border" is a collaboration between American photographer Richard Misrach and Mexican American sculptor and composer Guillermo Galindo, using the power of art to explore and humanize the complex issues surrounding the Mexican-American border through a transformative and multi-sensory experience.

Misrach, who has photographed the border since 2004, captures landscapes and objects, including things left behind by migrants. Galindo, in response to these photographs, has fashioned sound-generating sculptures from items Misrach collected along the border, such as water bottles, Border Patrol “drag tires,” spent shotgun shells, laddersand sections of the border wall itself. His musical composition embraces the Pre-Columbian belief that there was an intimate connection between an instrument and the material from which it was made, with no separation between spiritual and physical worlds.
Presented in English and Spanish, "Border Cantos|Sonic Border" offers perspective on the challenges of migration, inviting us to bridge boundaries.

When experienced as a whole, the images, instrumentsand emanating sounds create an immersive space in which to look, listenand learn about the complicated issues surrounding the Mexican-American border. While the artists do not seek to provide solutions to these issues, they do provide insight into a place where most people have never ventured, creating a poignant connection that draws on our humanity.

"'Border Cantos|Sonic Border' offers reflection and contemplation on what migration and borders mean both in terms of the United States-Mexico border on a political level and how borders affect individuals on a personal level," saysHilary Schroeder, assistant curator. "The combined auditory and visual experience presented in the exhibition provide entry points that are likely new for many of our visitors to these conversations. This exhibition, through the efforts of program manager Byron Tenesaca and community committee members,Juan Sanchez Martinez, Geny Hernandez, Dulce Miriam Porres, Ana Mayra Aguilarand Abel Gonzalez,will be richly enhanced through bi-lingual tours and programs, in-gallery activitiesand stories from our community."

Thisexhibition is included with general admission to the museum. Learn more and purchase ticketsatashevilleart.org.

x