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The Student News Site of Texas State University

The University Star




The Student News Site of Texas State University

The University Star

The Student News Site of Texas State University

The University Star










In a lecture with students and faculty from the School of Art and Design on Oct. 8, Meiselas discussed the driving questions, impulses and lessons that shaped her career, offering pertinent history behind “Crossing Borders.”

Early projects, such as “Carnival Strippers,” enabled Meiselas to cultivate a documentary practice — a way of working with people that involved “staying, returning and building relationships” — that became integral to her process of later working in Central America and a defining feature of her work.

Throughout the journey of her experiences photographing the Nicaraguan revolution, social and political unrest in other Central American countries, experiences of migration in California and projects outside of a Latin American context, Meiselas shared highlights about her experiences. She discussed the ethical complexities of photography, the evolution photographs can undergo and the role photographs play in shaping history.

At the close of her lecture, she invited the audience to participate in shaping history.

“With Crossings, these frames are pulled out of my archives,” Meiselas said. “They’re fragments, and I’m trying to bring them into a history of being made with you, today. I’m hoping you will make associations. I’m hoping you will ask questions. For me, it’s still re-visiting. It’s still carrying the past forward, thinking about photographs as documents of a historical process.”

Francesca Garza, photography senior, praised Meiselas’s lecture, noting the importance of her work and how her photographs have informed viewers.

“I felt so moved after listening to Susan Meiselas talk and seeing her exhibit… she has captured the gravity of dangerous situations,” Garza said. “She has documented important parts of history we would not have known or seen.”

Reed expressed hope for what the joint exhibitions might accomplish. He said he hopes the university community can engage in dialogue about building a future that values solidarity with migrant communities.

“I hope viewers feel the great trauma and devastation that conflict brings and the immense resilience and joy that is built despite this trauma,” Reed said. “I hope the exhibition is a catalyst for viewers to begin thinking about border and migration issues in ways that challenge the destructive narrative of us versus them.”

“Crossing Borders” will be on display through Feb. 26 at the Wittliff Collections.

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