Antarctica World Passport Office: Migration Week Marrakech
Date:
2018
Ref:
5099
Materials:
Bureau construction in reclaimed materials, various found objects, Antarctica World Passports, iPads, passport stamps, ink pads
Dimensions:
Variable dimension
Exhibition history:
2018 Migration Week Marrakech, Morocco
Courtesy:
Lucy + Jorge Orta
Antarctica World Passport Office is a component of the long-term research project 'Antarctica', which explores topics relating to the environment, politics, autonomy, habitat, mobility and relationships among peoples. For Lucy + Jorge Orta, Antarctica represents Utopia: a continent whose extreme climate imposes mutual aid and solidarity. The immaculate ice landscape is a filter for the kaleidoscope that make up our nations and multi-ethnic identities, concentrating the colours, races and creeds into the sum of light, and a vision of Hope.
Passport offices are constructed with reclaimed wood and found objects including boats, water recipients, suitcases, toys, that tower and bulge over rudimentary structures synonymous with the shanty town and border crossings that artists have traversed in some of remotest corners of the planet. From the passport office are delivered editions of the Antarctica World Passport. The first passport office was presented at the Pirelli Hangar Bicocca in Milan, Italy for the artists’ survey exhibition in 2008, and iterations have been created for museums and international convenings since.
In 2018, an new edition of the Antarctica World Passport and a Passport Office was commissioned for the Migration Week Marrakech (December 5-11, 2018). Migration Week is major global policy-making forum comprised of two official convenings: the 11th Global Forum on Migration and Development Summit (GFMD) and the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Conference to Adopt the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM). The Passport Office was installed in the blue zone of the conference centre where official delegates, representatives from UN member states, and international and civil society organisations were able to register for their Antarctica World Passport.
The installation was supported by the curatorial research project Displacement, to amplify the Platform on Disaster Displacement messages, to build greater support for improved protection and assistance for the millions of people displaced around the world each year due to the impacts of disasters and climate change.
For further details about the passport editions and registration process click here.