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Policing Justice


  • Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA) 15 Northeast Hancock Street Portland, OR, 97212 United States (map)

Alfredo Jaar
06.01.2020 18.39, 2022
Mixed Media Installation
Overall dimension variable
Courtesy Galerie Lelong & Co., New York and Paris and the artist, New York

Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA) presents Policing Justice, an exhibition and related programming with local, national, and international artists. 

Opening Reception: Friday, February 23, 2024 / 4:00 – 8:00 p.m. Exhibition Dates: February 23 – May 19, 2024 

Symposium: March 9, 2024 

Price: Exhibition, Free / Workshops & Performances, free or sliding scale

Website: pica.org/events/policingjustice 

Portland, OR - Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA) announces a major  forthcoming exhibition Policing Justice. Guest curated by Nina Amstutz, Associate  Professor of the History of Art and Architecture at the University of Oregon, and Cleo  Davis, local social construct artist, designer, educator, historian, and community leader,  this exhibition examines policing practices in Portland, Oregon, and their relationship  to longer local and national histories of oppression through the lens of artists who call  Portland their home and those who have witnessed and documented police brutality  across the globe. 

The extended George Floyd protests in 2020, which lasted longer in Portland than  in any other city in America and were met with over 6000+ documented instances  of police use of force, serve as a point of departure to explore Portland’s history of  policing in relation to racial, environmental, spatial, and juvenile justice. 

Local artists and activist groups reflect on these situated histories through a series  of commissioned installations, including work by Don’t Shoot Portland, Master  Artist Michael Bernard Stevenson Jr. in collaboration with Blue, and Cleo Davis  and Kayin Talton Davis in collaboration with Robert Clarke and Kimberly Moreland.  Complementing these regional collaborations, a selection of works on loan by  Alfredo Jaar, Sandy Rodriguez, and Carrie Mae Weems will situate what happened in  Portland in a national context. Policing Justice will also showcase a three-part video  installation by the British research and arts organization Forensic Architecture, which  includes a recent investigation into the Portland Police Bureau’s use of tear gas against  protesters in 2020 and its environmental and health impacts. The exhibition will be  accompanied by an active programming schedule, including a symposium, film series,  workshops, and panel discussions, which center on locally impacted communities. 

PICA thanks the American Art Dealers Association and the University of Oregon,  College of Design’s Tinker Hatfield Award for Innovation for supporting this exhibition.  


Artists

Alfredo Jaar, Blue, Carrie Mae Weems, Cleo Davis, Don’t Shoot Portland, Forensic Architecture, Kayin Talton Davis, Kimberly Moreland, Master Artist Michael Bernard Stevenson Jr., Robert Clarke, Sandy Rodriguez 

Curators: Nina Amstutz and Cleo Davis 

Consulting Curator/Producer: Kristan Kennedy 

Exhibition Design: Erté deGarces 

Curatorial/Production Assistant: Liz “L” Quezada