Trending...
- Dongsheng's Titanium Recycling Business Enters Aerospace Sector by 2025
- Phinge Announces Proposal to Combat Billions in Government Waste, Fraud, and Abuse with Proactive, Hardware-Verified Netverse App-Less Platform
- Crowdfunding Campaign Tips Off for 'NAWFSIDE' Short Film Highlighting Pressure in Youth Sports
Three unique and prescient exhibits running through Nov 6 or longer.
Multiple literary readings.
Multiple literary readings.
DURHAM, N.C. - Michimich -- As H&B celebrates our 25th anniversary we present three unique and prescient exhibits at our PS118 Gallery & Event Space in downtown Durham. All run through Nov. 6 or longer
FROM FALLUJAH: Work by four contemporary Fallujah photographers opens October 1. Curated by retired U.S. Army veteran John Bechtold who served in Iraq twice, this exhibit proceeds from the idea that the best way to learn about a place is through the people who live there.
Fallujah is remembered as an Iraq War battlefield in American public memory, if it's remembered at all. But Fallujah is a city where people work, attend school, and frequent public spaces wanting what we all want: a chance to peaceably choose our lives. This exhibit can be thought of as a first step to reimagine places damaged or destroyed during the Iraq War.
It's difficult to know if many people care about the effect of American state-sponsored violence, but we should. The same fighter jets that streak over stadiums in the United States to patriotic cheers once streaked over Fallujah to drop 500-pound bombs. One of these realities is visible; the other is not. The disparity between the two is informed by the ways war is represented in different cultural contexts. We see the weapons of war, the happy homecomings, and sometimes we even glimpse, briefly, the damage to soldiers' bodies. What we don't witness are the citizens of countries affected by war.
This exhibit seeks to literally install an Iraqi perspective in an American space. With this in mind, audiences can expect framed photographs displayed traditionally on the main wall. Additionally, more images will be shared in a recreated Iraqi living space installation inside the gallery's storefront windows, and this installation will remain lighted 24/7 to engage sidewalk passers by at all times.
More on Michimich.com
As the U.S. is in a unique moment of revisiting the effectiveness and goals of our foreign policies and nation building, we feel this is an important time to consider the specific perspectives, lives, and interests of citizens usually viewed as secondary to global and strategic military concerns.
After a twenty-one-year career in the United States Army, John Bechtold is living his second act of life as an artist and academic. He was in Iraq twice, once as a platoon leader and once again as an advisor to the Iraqi Army. That experience continues to shape how he sees the world. John is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the American Studies program at the UNC-Chapel Hill. His dissertation explores the representation of war in American public memory.
RECEPTION Saturday, October 9; 4–6pm; guest scholar Noor Ghazi will give a free public talk.
CURATOR TALK Thursday, October 21; 7:00pm
John will talk about war in public memory and some of the curatorial choices which informed this project.
On the stage in the back of the gallery (which hosts a range of artist talks and literary readings)we share an installation by Margaret Sartor.
TORN: A Year that Changed Everything presents a grid of 14 sequenced framed fine art prints from her ongoing altered newspaper mixed media series. This work looks back at an incredibly wild year of politics and our pandemic. It presents one individual's artistic responseto the onslaught of bad and difficult news through putting down on paper the words and emotions that come from within.
In Margaret's own words, "I long ago abandoned television news in favor of the satisfyingly tactile experience of reading the newspaper at my kitchen table . . . Opening the newspaper became an experience I more often dreaded than savored, a predictable fall down a rabbit hole of tumultuous events, heroic struggles, and historic failures . . . I could not help but give voice to my interior battles. Eventually, I began to write my rage, my puzzlement, my frustration, and my shock directly into the hydra-headed headlines, stories, and photographs . . Looking back now, and viewing them collectively, they seem also to provide a kind of cumulative portrait ofthe time during which they were created, of our common hopes and our common nightmare — of a year that changed everything."
More on Michimich.com
Margaret Sartor is a writer, curator, and visual artist who lives in Durham and has had numerous books published as an editor, a writer, and a curator. Sartor's photographs and essays have appeared in numerous books and publications, among them The Paris Review, Aperture, The New Yorker, and most recently, Visible Spectrum: Portraits from the World of Autism by Mary Berridge.
*TORN is actually a two venue exhibition as an installation of 26 works from
TORN: The Problem of Human Behavior is on view at our Broad Street gallery (through the end of the year)
Reception at PS118 Saturday, October 23; 4–6pm
This two venue exhibit will greatly appeal to lovers of literature and the craft of creative writing, as well as cultural anthropologists and news junkies who recognize the uniqueness of the pandemic and divisive political climate we are living through.
GALLERY HOURS
PS118 is open Fridays and Saturdays, Noon–8pm, and by appointment.
Our Broad Street gallery, located at 1116 Broad Street is open M–F, 8:30-4/5ish and by appt.
More information about these exhibits and the artists/curators can be found on the following websites.
horseandbuggypress.com
fromfallujah.com
johnbechtold.me/about
margaretsartor.com
We are happy to give private tours to individuals or groups, and appreciate any help publicizing any of these strong exhibits as we aim to spark joy and conversation in different directions.
Dave Wofford
FROM FALLUJAH: Work by four contemporary Fallujah photographers opens October 1. Curated by retired U.S. Army veteran John Bechtold who served in Iraq twice, this exhibit proceeds from the idea that the best way to learn about a place is through the people who live there.
Fallujah is remembered as an Iraq War battlefield in American public memory, if it's remembered at all. But Fallujah is a city where people work, attend school, and frequent public spaces wanting what we all want: a chance to peaceably choose our lives. This exhibit can be thought of as a first step to reimagine places damaged or destroyed during the Iraq War.
It's difficult to know if many people care about the effect of American state-sponsored violence, but we should. The same fighter jets that streak over stadiums in the United States to patriotic cheers once streaked over Fallujah to drop 500-pound bombs. One of these realities is visible; the other is not. The disparity between the two is informed by the ways war is represented in different cultural contexts. We see the weapons of war, the happy homecomings, and sometimes we even glimpse, briefly, the damage to soldiers' bodies. What we don't witness are the citizens of countries affected by war.
This exhibit seeks to literally install an Iraqi perspective in an American space. With this in mind, audiences can expect framed photographs displayed traditionally on the main wall. Additionally, more images will be shared in a recreated Iraqi living space installation inside the gallery's storefront windows, and this installation will remain lighted 24/7 to engage sidewalk passers by at all times.
More on Michimich.com
- $430 Million 2026 Revenue Forecast; 26% Organic Growth; $500,000 Stock Dividend Highlight a Powerful AI & Digital Transformation Story: IQSTEL $IQST
- Wzzph Deploys 5-Million-TPS Trading Engine with Hot-Cold Wallet Architecture Serving 500,000 Active Users Across Latin America
- Preston Dermatology & Skin Surgery Center and Dr. Sheel Desai Solomon Dominate Raleigh's Best Awards from The News & Observer
- $73.6 Million Multi-Year Backlog and Florida State Term Contract Drive Momentum for AI-Cybersecurity Pioneer: Cycurion, Inc. (N A S D A Q: CYCU) $CYCU
- Year-Round Deals for Customers With Square Signs
As the U.S. is in a unique moment of revisiting the effectiveness and goals of our foreign policies and nation building, we feel this is an important time to consider the specific perspectives, lives, and interests of citizens usually viewed as secondary to global and strategic military concerns.
After a twenty-one-year career in the United States Army, John Bechtold is living his second act of life as an artist and academic. He was in Iraq twice, once as a platoon leader and once again as an advisor to the Iraqi Army. That experience continues to shape how he sees the world. John is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the American Studies program at the UNC-Chapel Hill. His dissertation explores the representation of war in American public memory.
RECEPTION Saturday, October 9; 4–6pm; guest scholar Noor Ghazi will give a free public talk.
CURATOR TALK Thursday, October 21; 7:00pm
John will talk about war in public memory and some of the curatorial choices which informed this project.
On the stage in the back of the gallery (which hosts a range of artist talks and literary readings)we share an installation by Margaret Sartor.
TORN: A Year that Changed Everything presents a grid of 14 sequenced framed fine art prints from her ongoing altered newspaper mixed media series. This work looks back at an incredibly wild year of politics and our pandemic. It presents one individual's artistic responseto the onslaught of bad and difficult news through putting down on paper the words and emotions that come from within.
In Margaret's own words, "I long ago abandoned television news in favor of the satisfyingly tactile experience of reading the newspaper at my kitchen table . . . Opening the newspaper became an experience I more often dreaded than savored, a predictable fall down a rabbit hole of tumultuous events, heroic struggles, and historic failures . . . I could not help but give voice to my interior battles. Eventually, I began to write my rage, my puzzlement, my frustration, and my shock directly into the hydra-headed headlines, stories, and photographs . . Looking back now, and viewing them collectively, they seem also to provide a kind of cumulative portrait ofthe time during which they were created, of our common hopes and our common nightmare — of a year that changed everything."
More on Michimich.com
- SecurePII Raises US$3.5M (A$5M) to Unlock AI and Compliance for Voice Data and Expands Global Presence
- End your Tinnitus with Chiropractic Care in Macomb Township
- Peter Coe Verbica Stands with Rural Families and Horse Owners: "Keep Horses Classified as Livestock"
- The Mobile-First Company Raises $12M to Build Simple, Powerful Software for Small Teams
- Lick Pineapple Flavored Massage Oil Outperforming and Enticing
Margaret Sartor is a writer, curator, and visual artist who lives in Durham and has had numerous books published as an editor, a writer, and a curator. Sartor's photographs and essays have appeared in numerous books and publications, among them The Paris Review, Aperture, The New Yorker, and most recently, Visible Spectrum: Portraits from the World of Autism by Mary Berridge.
*TORN is actually a two venue exhibition as an installation of 26 works from
TORN: The Problem of Human Behavior is on view at our Broad Street gallery (through the end of the year)
Reception at PS118 Saturday, October 23; 4–6pm
This two venue exhibit will greatly appeal to lovers of literature and the craft of creative writing, as well as cultural anthropologists and news junkies who recognize the uniqueness of the pandemic and divisive political climate we are living through.
GALLERY HOURS
PS118 is open Fridays and Saturdays, Noon–8pm, and by appointment.
Our Broad Street gallery, located at 1116 Broad Street is open M–F, 8:30-4/5ish and by appt.
More information about these exhibits and the artists/curators can be found on the following websites.
horseandbuggypress.com
fromfallujah.com
johnbechtold.me/about
margaretsartor.com
We are happy to give private tours to individuals or groups, and appreciate any help publicizing any of these strong exhibits as we aim to spark joy and conversation in different directions.
Dave Wofford
Source: Horse & Buggy Press and Friends
0 Comments
Latest on Michimich.com
- Heritage at South Brunswick's Townhome Models Coming Soon!
- PatientNow Acquires Recura, the AI Growth Engine Powering Practice Growth
- Boston Industrial Solutions Unveils New and Improved Natron® UV Screen Printing Ink
- Genuine Smiles Unveils New User-Friendly Website
- Nusign Global Launch Event Concludes Successfully, Embarking on a New International Chapter
- Lift Solutions Holdings Announces Exclusive Distributorship for Advanced Camera and Sensor Products from Automate Matrix
- Political Division and Safety Concerns Drive Record Number of Americans to Seek "Golden Visas," La Vida Survey Finds
- The Citizens Commission on Human Rights of Florida Celebrates Volunteers and Community Partners at the 9th Annual Humanitarian Awards Banquet
- J French's #1 Album "I Don't Believe in Bad Days" Enters the Grammy Conversation
- Words of Veterans & Veterans Growing America Collaboration
- Mature Athlete - Want Elite, Web-Based Nutrition and Training Coaching?
- Engaged at Any Age: 73-Year-Old Client Finds True Love Through Elite Asian Matchmaker
- Launch of Professional Private Autopsy Services to Support Families, Professionals, and Researchers
- He Started a New Career at 77; Maybe Not His Last
- "The Art of Philanthropy" — A Year-Long Campaign Supporting the USO and Military Veterans
- TRUE Palliative Care Launches as California Strengthens Commitment to Compassionate Care Under SB 403
- Mysterious Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Appears to Pause Near Mars, Exhibiting Periodic Light Pulses
- $73.6 Million in Order Backlog Poised for Explosive Growth in 2026; Streamlined Share Structure: Cycurion, Inc. (N A S D A Q: CYCU) $CYCU
- Osric Langevin Unveils "Quantitative Trend" Framework for Multi-Asset Analysis in Q4 2025
- Experience Days Named Among the UK's Top Christmas Gifts



