Across Shared Skies brings together five artists from the United States and four from Nepal to explore how memory, place, and form are shaped and transformed across different contexts. Though geographically distant, the work by these artists meets in a shared, fluid space where memory shifts and form is always changing.
The works in this exhibition move through quiet tension; through presence and absence, visibility, concealment, holding and letting go. The objects, images, and bodies act as carriers of memory and lived experience, often holding fragments rather than conveying fixed meanings.
Some of the works in the exhibition explore how knowledge and representation are shaped today, where digital images, AI, myth, and science overlap. While others focus on the body as a site of identity, shaped by movement, migration, and adaptation, where meaning is often felt rather than spoken.
Nature and landscape also play an active role, not as background but as living systems that connect human and non-human worlds, cycles, and time.
Inherently, the exhibition sees memory as layered and evolving presence in objects, gestures, and spaces. In Across Shared Skies, these different experiences come together, offering the audience a space where differences meet, resonate, and remain open.