New photo exhibit at Pier 21 sheds light on major international migrations - Action News
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Nova Scotia

New photo exhibit at Pier 21 sheds light on major international migrations

Photos from Afghanistan, Congo, the U.S.-Mexico border, Canada's Roxham Road crossing and the refugee crisis in Greece will be on display in a new exhibit known as Crossing Lines: A New Age of Migration, opening at the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 on Wednesday.

Crossing Lines: A New Age of Migration exhibit opens Wednesday and runs until March 24

One time use, just for the Pier 21 exhibit story.
Tens of thousands of life jackets abandoned by refugees fleeing wars in the Middle East and beyond lie in piles in a landfill in Molyvos, Lesbos, Greece on March 15, 2016. (Darren Ell)

A photo of a mountain of discarded life jackets in Lesbos, Greece, gets to the heart of a new exhibit opening at the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 in Halifax on Wednesday.

The exhibit is called Crossing Lines: A New Age of Migration.It's a selection of images taken by two freelance photographers, Darren Ell and RogerLeMoyne, who live in Montreal and travel the world.The photos all feature people involved in recent international migrations.

Ell, who captured the image of the life jackets, said the Greek island is where many refugees from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan landed as they fled conflict in 2015 and 2016.

"I visited the site where they were dumping all the life jackets ... there were hundreds of thousands of them just piled everywhere," Ell told CBC Radio's MainstreetHalifax.

"I took quite a bit of time there because it was certainly revealing to me in the sense the life jackets, for me, they represented individuals who had kind of been neglected and were lumped here. It had a certain resonance for me."

A woman wearing holds her baby in a reflective blanket by the sea.
A young Syrian mother holds her child wrapped in a thermal blanket after disembarking on the shore of Lesbos, Greece, in November 2015. (Roger Lemoyne)

Dan Conlin, the curator of the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21, worked with Ell and LeMoyne to put the exhibit together.

An image from the exhibit that stands out to him shows ethnic Rohingyacrossing into Bangladesh from Myanmar. It was taken by LeMoynein 2016.

"It's a vast shot of many people crossing a river border, little children emerging from muddy water and a baby in a basket. What I really like about Roger and Darren's work is you get these big-scale, on-the-spot looks, but also the people are front and centre," Conlin told Mainstreet.

Conlin said in addition to shots taken in the field, there are also portraits of refugees who are now in Canada to "sharpen up the individual experience."

One of his other favourites is theportrait of a Syrian refugee named Hala in Montreal.

"Her look of pain and reflection is just so powerfully conveyed. The lighting is so delicate, it reminds of Vermeer's [Girl with a Pearl Earring] portrait," Conlin said.

"What I think is really significant about the work you see in Crossing Lines, it's easy when you look at recent history of these big news stories to lose track of the individuals and there's an amazing humanizing quality of this photo exhibition that helps create empathy and understanding of what many migrants are going through."

A woman cloaked in a grey scarf wears a white hijab.
Hala, a Syrian refugee, used to panic when planes flew overhead in Montreal. She lived in fear for her family back home. This image was taken in Montreal on Nov. 27, 2013. (Darren Ell in collaboration Philippe Montbazet)

Conlin said LeMoyne and Ell preparedwritten context for each photo inthe exhibit. He said Pier 21 is theperfect venue as the new exhibit will sit next to the museum's permanent display that sharesthe history of Canada's refugee policy.

"The combination of their intensive humanizing view and then the historical context we can provide makes this a show worth really seeing," Conlin said.

Ell said as a photographer, he feels it's his responsibility to make sure the images in this exhibit are seen.

"It's important to send a message, to get it out there, because it can be a catalyzing thing for public opinion,for public policy," he said.

A woman with children following behind her in the woods.
A migrant mother from Yemen leads her family across the Canadian border at Roxham Road in Quebec on March 5, 2017. (Darren Ell)

Taking these kinds of photos, Ell said, has made him more worldly and fortunate to be in Canada.

"It can make you question what you read, what you hear, it can make you much more compassionate and empathetic to people you meet."

Crossing Lines: A New Age of Migrationopens on Wednesday and runs until March 24 at the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21.

With files from Mainstreet Halifax

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