私たちはこのページをできるだけ早く翻訳するために取り組んでいます。ご理解いただきありがとうございます。

Huma Bhabha on We Come in Peace

Bhabha discusses her work’s themes of colonialism, war, displacement, and memories of place.

In this video, artist Huma Bhabha and curator Shanay Jhaveri discuss her sculpture We Come in Peace, the 2018 site-specific installation for The Met's Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Roof Garden, the sixth in a series of commissions for the outdoor space. Bhabha's work addresses themes of colonialism, war, displacement, and memories of place. Using found materials and the detritus of everyday life, she creates haunting human figures that hover between abstraction and figuration, monumentality and entropy.


Contributors

Huma Bhabha
Shanay Jhaveri
Assistant Curator, Department of Modern and Contemporary Art

Purple mannequin hand holding a body shaped guitar.
Video
Join Bradley Strauchen-Scherer, Curator in the Department of Musical Instruments, and Ava Valentino, Research Assistant in the Department of Musical Instruments, along with Brett Renfer, Senior Project Manager of Emerging Technologies, to virtually explore the Musical Bodies exhibition.
June 18
An assembly of formally dressed men gather around a table with a document in a historical setting
Objects on view in Revolution! offer insights into how artists on both sides of the Atlantic responded to the political and military drama that unfolded before and after the Declaration of Independence.
Constance C. McPhee
June 18
A colorful tapestry depicting an ancient scene with a crowd in vibrant robes, a bull, and Roman architecture.
Writer and historian Ingrid Rowland illuminates how ancient history and culture influenced Raphael’s art.
Ingrid D. Rowland
June 16
More in:MaterialsBehind the ScenesArt-MakingPower & PrivilegeOn View