Homage: Queer lineages on video

June 27, 2025 – October 19, 2025
Wallach Art Gallery at Columbia University

615 W 129th St
New York, NY

Kang Seung Lee, video still from “The Heart of A Hand,” 2022. 4K video, 13 min. 13 sec.

Kang Seung Lee, video still from “The Heart of A Hand,” 2022. 4K video, 13 min. 13 sec.

Homage: Queer lineages on video presents works by seven contemporary artists who use moving images to pay tribute to cultural figures and histories that have been formative, if often (but not always) overlooked. The works in the exhibition, all made over the last two decades, explore how lens- and time-based media have enabled artists to articulate desiring and melancholic modes of relationality across generations. Intervening in commemorative genres of image making—including portraiture and documentary—through performative acts, selective appropriation, and imaginative staging, these works produce and problematize queer forms of kinship. The exhibition reflects on the ability of film and video to disrupt processes of both memorialization and erasure, foregrounding instead the multivalent meanings and affective charge created by resonant combinations of image, sound, and text. The body is addressed and implicated across a number of works, which consider the legacies and lived experiences of illness that have catalyzed communities of care and networks of solidarity, especially among marginalized groups. Departing from the preoccupation with visibility and publicness across politics of identity and representation, these works demonstrate the potential of anachronistic gestures, formal affinities, and archival adjacencies in reframing relationships between artists and their chosen ancestors.

All the works in the exhibition are drawn from the Akeroyd Collection, the moving image facet of the Shane Akeroyd Art Collection. Akeroyd Collection operates to make the film and video work in the collection available through a dedicated website, film screenings, and loans to international arts institutions. The collection overall reflects the intellectual, political, and aesthetic impulses of contemporary art and its discourses, reflecting the pressing issues of our time.