Chicago Art Exhibit Examines Global War on 20th Anniversary of Iraq Invasion – Southside Weekly
When I first heard about Surviving the Long Wars, a series of art exhibitions and events that opened with a Veteran Art Triennial and Summit in March, I was both curious and skeptical. Having lived through the events of 9/11 and the structural Islamophobia that intensified in its wake, Im jaded about American portrayals of war and Muslims, and how quickly they fall into a good Muslim, bad Muslim dichotomy. I had never met anyone who was a veteran, let alone a veteran who was stationed in countries where my people came from.
But I trusted one of the co-organizers, Aaron Hughes, who put on an incredible interdisciplinary exhibit at the DePaul Art Museum in the fall that connected policing and militarism around the world, from Guantanamo Bay to Homan Square. So at the same time, I was drawn to attend, to see for myself what veteran art would evoke in me and whether it would feel like propaganda about the necessity of war or critically reflect on U.S. militarism.
I wasnt disappointed. The triennial questioned the origins and impacts of war at home and abroad by bringing together art and artists. By putting a face to the individuals creating pieces intimately linked to their identity, the exhibits moved past reflection and invited artists and attendees to make space for all the hurt that came with bringing up the displacement and violence of war.
The summit took place March 16-19 and was put together with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities Veteran fellows and the three institutions the exhibit will be housed in: the Chicago Cultural Center, Hyde Park Arts Center, and the Newberry Museum. The summit featured performances, speeches, and hands-on arts activities hosted by the artists at all three locations.
The triennial was organized by a group of artists, organizers, and academics, mostly in Chicago, who are well-versed in work and writing around the global war on terror, policing, and the American Indian wars. In addition to Aaron Hughes, an Iraqi War veteran, curator, and anti-war activist, the triennial was organized by Ronak K. Kapadia, an associate professor of Gender and Womens Studies at UIC; Therese Quinn, a professor in Museum Exhibition Studies; Joseph Lefthand, a veteran descended from the Cheyenne-Arapaho, Taos, and Zuni tribes; Amber Zora, veteran and artist from South Dakota; and Meranda Roberts, who recently co-curated the Aspaalooke Women and Warriors exhibit at the Field Museum.
In an interview with the Weekly, Ronak K. Kapadia talked about the internationalist work they were attempting to do by curating this project. It is about putting Arab, Muslim and South Asian diasporic art in conversation with the long, centuries long history of native and black led rebellion against security orders in the US.
This triennial was coming at the twenty year anniversary of the U.S. Invasion of Iraq. The advertising of the summit brought to light the two longest wars in U.S history: the American Indian Wars and the Global War on Terror. Those parallels were explored and made even more apparent throughout the weekend.
There was a palpable discomfort among the viewers of this art; forcing a reckoning about how to hold multiple truths about the war machine.
Its this particular group of people whose lives and communities have also been destroyed by the war machine, trying to have discussions about transformative conversations, healing, justice oriented conversations about the perpetrator, perpetration of violence and some mode of reconciliation or reckoning now, said Kapadia.
The second day of the exhibit, at the Hyde Park Arts Center, featured programming that captured the essence of seventeen artists works while speaking to the themes being navigated during this summit. This space felt more casual than the Newberry from the day before and the Cultural Center would later. There was space to walk around, eat, and drink at your own pace; luxuries not afforded as readily in the more policed arts spaces downtown.
Mahwish Chisty, a visiting artist from Massachusetts who was raised in Pakistan, brought with her a series of pieces called Drone Art. Beautifying the ugliest parts of violence, she created collages in the outlines of the aerial drones used by the U.S. military in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Yemen.
The imagery on these machines is borrowing from the truck art, which is a native tradition of Pakistani truck art culture, where trucks are painted beautifully, elaborately in bright colors, and they have this iconography mixed with text and almost universal visual symbols that require no language in some way, Chisty said during the group tour. So Im using that to show the deadliness of these machines.
The exhibit wasnt remarkable just because of the incredible art. As a fly on the wall in the room, one could expect to overhear the history of the U.S. Annexation of Native land, the Patriot Act, and policing in schools all while breaking bread and sipping a glass of wine. The threads of Chistys work, and how intimate and enmeshed surveillance is in the lives of drone victims, drew parallels to the work of June Carpenter, another exhibit artist.
Carpenter, repatriation specialist at the Field Museum, made visible the violence of the forced expulsion of Native Americans through the creation of hand embroidered shawls. The shawls contained the language of the six most egregious Supreme Court cases that set the precedent for violence against Native Americans. In one such case titled Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831), the Cherokee nation was deemed a domestic dependent nation, thus establishing the guardian-ward dynamic between Native nations and the American government.
This case, along with many others, set legal precedent for the ways the U.S. government received leeway to intervene in every aspect of Native life through forced separation of families and schooling. This was all portrayed in ornately embroidered woven shawls functioning almost as shrouds and expansive coverings for the abuse done by the American government. Shawls, symbols of beauty and warmth, even wealth, in Carpenters pieces are symbolic of all the covers that have allowed for American violence.
These seventeen stars that are here are the beaded stars. These are seven pointed stars, said Carpenter. They are on the Cherokee seal. And that refers to these 17,000 people, 17,000 Cherokee, who are removed from Georgia after this case was decided.
In a place like Chicago, where indigeneity is understood differently than in states like Oklahoma and South Dakota where reservations are visible and present spaces, it is not by coincidence that Native American art is less seen and visible.
While Native Americans were offered land in neighboring states, they were continuously pushed out of IL, making it one of sixteen statesand one of the furthest westto not have any reservations. This present-day fact is a reminder of the violence that went into that expulsion, and makes the organizing of groups like Chi Nations Youth Council even more significant.
As Kapadia shared, the parallels between these wars lie in the way the war machine aims to disrupt intimate spaces; an idea that many of the artists at the triennial captured.
War violence works by trying to destroy intimate intimacy, to also destroy our sense of our relationship to each other. This is a key idea in my book, which is that counterinsurgency operates by trying to destroy our sense of how we are connected to each other. And so actually, part of what our practice is doing is giving us a sense of solidarity and a sense of intimacy through difference.
Intimacy was a thread that wove together all the pieces across the city, whether through the forms themselves, or the ways artists shared stories of personal and public lives being disrupted and destroyed by war. Saba Elahi, Chicago-based artist, built off the same drone imagery as Chisty and the use of fabric as Carpenter, but instead of capturing the drone, she captured what the drone would see. By embroidering living room scenes, and intimate domestic spaces, she showed what a drone operator might see prior to falling on and destroying a family.
Outside of the context, these pieces could be seen as images of families embroidered, tender moments over a box of pizza or sitting on the couch watching nightly news. Instead, in the context of drones, its violence is even more insidious. Taking it a step further, she uses the form and technique of machine embroidery in some of her pieces to shed light on the mechanization of so much of the warfare industry, whether it be in production or practice.
There was no shortage of mediums used in this exhibit, from performance and paintings to collages, weaving, embroidery, and printmaking. Ruth Kaneko, former combat medic, created paper out of her military uniforms to honor the 38,000 Hawaiians who signed a petition refusing annexation of Hawaii by the United States. The pieces were an homage to her Hawaiian heritage and resistance ancestry, and were poignant in the way they combined form and function to deliver power.
In a tearful explanation because of the recent death of her grandmother, Kaneko explained how she came to these pieces. Both by anonymizing, but showing the sheer volume of individuals impacted by U.S forced annexation, she makes clear what it means to be from a community victimized by the war machine and a veteran.
In the early 1800s, there was 1.2 million Native Hawaiians in Hawaii. By the time that it was illegally annexed by the United States, there were 40,000 native Hawaiians left, said Ruth. So after Hawaii was illegally annexed by the United States in 1893, these women went across Hawaii and they collected 38,000 petition signatures, which basically is the entire population.
The pieces shed light on the organizing work of Native Hawaiians at the time and the power and work it took to collect signatures from all the Hawaiians left after strategic policies of displacement and erasure by the U.S. military. The art was also deeply personal for Kaneko, as her family name was one of the 38,000 featured. Her pieces, as of many Native veterans, captured the tension that I walked into the exhibit anticipating; how could we hold space for veterans and war victims? The reality of which is that war entangles itself deep into communities and there is room for the veterans in this space to share just how insidiously that happens.
In the work of Chitra Ganesh, New York-based artist, on display at the Chicago Cultural Center, we begin to see a reminder of the effect on individual lives that the war on terror had. Her soft art form in the watercolor portraits Seeing the Disappeared highlights individuals disappeared by the U.S government following 9/11 such as Fahd Gazy, a former detainee at Guantanamo Bay, or Sami Al- Arian, a Kuwaiti-born Palestinian activist held under house arrest from 2008 to 2014 under Patriot Act charges. Form and medium speak especially strongly to this, as instead of stiff sharp portraits with acrylic paint, she chose to do watercolor, softening the edges and the outlines of the portraits to honor lives lost and stolen.
Each space that housed the triennial added something different to the experience. The Hyde Park Art Center was a unique space for this exhibit, miles south from the rest of the installations, in the midst of work and studios of people like Robert Paige and Malika Jackson. The culminating moment at HPAC came with the performance by Hiplito Arriaga III, GOODW.Y.N., and Hussein Smko. On the cusp of Ramadan, on jummah nonetheless, I did not expect to hear the adhan echo through the gallery room at HPAC. But the start of the performance was just that, the creation of a solemn space. From there these three movement artists captured hurt and pain, joy and solidarity, all through the lyrical ways their bodies danced and fell.
In every way the still art (a word for non movement) could not capture emotion, the performance artists delivered, tying all the pieces together with a knot.
The artwork in the Cultural Center evoked a grandeur that the arts center could not, mirroring the art in a different way. Participants walked through the Tiffany dome and the marble engraved ceilings to make their way to the gallery. The lights on Michael Rakowitz portrait-esque collages of Iraq commemorated art stolen and destroyed in Iraq, leaving space for silences, but also grandeur to capture the remains from the Assyrian northwest palace of Kalhu. These wars not only had an impact on people and bodies, but art and the space it occupies.
The pieces throughout this exhibit echo in the trauma and hurt they convey.
Very little attention [in mainstream media] to the ongoing nature of these wars, like these Indian wars never ended, said Kapadia. The War on Terror never ended, even if it was declared mission accomplished a million times. Yeah, the war permeates the lives of so many different kinds of peoples. And so I think part of Surviving the Long Wars was about attending to that not only afterlife, but the ongoing lived presence of war in lots of different kinds of peoples lives.
The exhibit invites viewers to walk away with a global sense of solidarity, a commitment to the internationalist struggle for freedom. In the same way, it can evoke a sense of powerlessness; despite the beautiful community created, these wars still go on.
As Dunya Mikhail said in one of the poems she read on the second day of the exhibit:
Their songs will not save us,
although, in the chilliest times,
they keep us warm,
and when we need to touch the soul
to know its not dead
their songs
give us that touch.
Surviving the Long Wars exhibits will remain open for a few months. Residues and Rebellions at Newberry Library until May 26; Unlikely Entanglements at the Hyde Park Art Center until July 9; Reckon and Reimagine at the Chicago Cultural Center until June 4.
Isra is an advocate at the Children and Family Justice Center and reporter with the Invisible Institute. In her free time she is reading, writing, and contemplating our role in the movement and how we can work to build a better world.
See more here:
Chicago Art Exhibit Examines Global War on 20th Anniversary of Iraq Invasion - Southside Weekly
- Iraq says oil output, exports can recover within a week once Hormuz crisis ends - Reuters - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iraq Slashes Oil Prices for Buyers Willing to Transit Hormuz - Bloomberg.com - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Saudi Arabia Joins UAE, India, Thailand, Qatar, Bahrain, Iraq, and More Nations in West Asia in Urgent Push to Find New Ways to Bypass the Hormuz... - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iraq Is Envisioning New Oil Pipelines But They Are Likely a Pipe Dream - Foundation for Defense of Democracies - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Chevron Is Negotiating for a Stake in a Massive Oilfield in Iraq: 3 Key Takeaways for Investors - The Motley Fool - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Four convicted in Iraq for promoting banned Baath Party ideology - Jurist.org - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iran, Iraq Agree to Strengthen Ties in Call Between Pezeshkian and Al-Zaidi - Kurdistan24 - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iraq offers discounted oil to tankers willing to risk Strait of Hormuz - Yahoo Finance - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iraq is said to slash oil prices amid Hormuz risks to Gulf cargoes - Seeking Alpha - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Opinion | Is Anyone Comforted When Trump Compares Iran War to Vietnam or Iraq? - Common Dreams - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Qatar Airways Cargo restores freighter and belly-hold services to Iraq - Aviation Business News - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- A CIA Officer Returns to Iraq and Uncovers Embarrassing Details of the Spy Agencys WMD Debacle - SpyTalk - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- US Embassy in Baghdad urges American citizens to Leave Iraq - IraqiNews - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Over $30 a barrel discount, but: Iraq cuts crude oil prices, if buyers are willing to transit Strait of - The Times of India - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iraq to face Andorra in Spain friendly ahead of World Cup - IraqiNews - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iraq pivots to Turkey to reroute oil export system after Hormuz disruption - EUalive - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- US warns Iran-aligned armed factions plotting attacks in Iraq - - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iraq dollar exchange rates rise slightly in Baghdad and Erbil - IraqiNews - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Iraq resumes Syria trade with 3 shipments via Rabia crossing after 13 years - - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Hermer could face misconduct investigation over Iraq witch hunt - The Telegraph - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Trump gives his blessing to Iraq's new pick for prime minister and invites al-Zaidi to Washington - AP News - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- UAE bans citizens from travel to Iran, Lebanon and Iraq, urges those there to leave - Reuters - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- UAE bans travel to Iran, Lebanon and Iraq over regional situation - The Times of Israel - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Iraq Veteran reacts to Trump bashing Italy and Spain: So incredibly painful to watch - MS NOW - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- UAE Warns Citizens to Immediately Leave Iran, Iraq, and Lebanon - IranWire - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Iraq is Caught up in the U.S.-Iran War - The Soufan Center - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- UAE Bars Citizens From Traveling to Iran, Lebanon, and Iraq - The Media Line - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Annual Amnesty International report warns of worsening human rights crisis in Iraq - SyriacPress - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Reporters Without Borders report warns of decline in press freedom in Turkey, Iraq, and Iran, positive improvement in Syria - SyriacPress - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- 'Attacked 28 times in a day' - BBC visits heavily targeted US-UK base in Iraq - BBC - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- UAE bans travel to Iran, Lebanon and Iraq, urges its citizens to leave region - Middle East Eye - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- View / Americas Iraq failure is haunting Trumps war with Iran - Semafor - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- UAE bans citizens from travelling to Iran, Iraq and Lebanon - The National - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- UAE issues travel ban for Iran, Lebanon and Iraq; urges citizens to return home - Trkiye Today - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Trump gives his blessing to Iraq's new pick for prime minister and invites al-Zaidi to Washington - The Killeen Daily Herald - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Iraq Needs to Empower Somo Not Reinvent It - Energy Intelligence - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Travel Ban Shocks UAE Citizens What Comes Next as Iran, Lebanon, and Iraq Remain Off Limits And How People Are Finding New Paths: All You Need To Know... - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- World Cup 2026: Iraq to take on Spain in friendly match - Foot-Africa.com - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Iran-Iraq Tanker War redux? Why the Strait of Hormuz crisis is different - Al Jazeera - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Oman Unites Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Qatar, and More to Reignite International Flights at Tehrans Imam Khomeini Airport, Sparking a New Era of Air... - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- A Quicksand Feeling: How Iraq has been Roiled by the Israel-US War on Iran - Informed Comment - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Washington uses Iraq's own oil money to bend Baghdad to its will - France 24 - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- A long-shuttered Iraq-Syria border crossing reopens for the first time in more than a decade - PBS - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Discover Iraq: Saladin Provinces long road to recovery after ISIS - - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Iraq enters a "constitutional vacuum": Factional conflicts and the American veto are hindering the formation of a government - - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Iraq postpones operations of first LNG terminal - IraqiNews - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- A new Iraq war is coming Tehran is rallying its proxies - UnHerd - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Iraq could face over 100 days of dust storms this season: Monitor - The New Region - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Iraq: Vassal State or Strategic Survivor? - The Times of Israel - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Kuwait military says border posts targeted by drone attack launched from Iraq - The Times of Israel - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Iraq's most earthquake-prone border district recorded 29 tremors in two years - - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Iraq War Weapons of Mass Destruction Spokeswoman to Host Fundraiser for Virginia Democrat Dorothy McAuliffe - NOTUS News of the United States - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Iraq weather update: Heavy rain and dust storms forecast through Friday - IraqiNews - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- What the Iran-Iraq war taught todays Iranian leaders - and why that matters - Middle East Eye - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Iraq Weather - GazetteXtra - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- The Kurdish Bargain: Elite Politics and Federalism in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq - Gulf International Forum - April 27th, 2026 [April 27th, 2026]
- Iraq Eyes $4.6B Pipeline to Jordan to Boost Export Capacity Amid Strait of Hormuz Closure - Pipeline Technology Journal - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- U.S. Turns Up Pressure on Iraq to Distance Itself From Iran - The New York Times - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Operation Economic Fury Turns Its Attention to Iraq - Foundation for Defense of Democracies - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Iraq plans to generate 30,000 megawatts of electricity in summer - IraqiNews - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Secure, efficient, resilient: One year of TIR in Iraq - IRU | World Road Transport Organisation - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- US suspends dollar shipments to Iraq, but why was it transporting them to Baghdad? - TRT World - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Iraq releases over 11 million fish into Anah Lake to boost fish stocks - - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Iraq extends parliamentary term to allow government formation - - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Iraq and Syria Reconnect Through Border Route Shut for Over a Decade - The Media Line - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Iraq expands e-governance with new company registration system - - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- US tightens grip on Iraq over Iran-linked groups, halt dollar flows over militia activity - investingLive - April 23rd, 2026 [April 23rd, 2026]
- Iraq aims to select new PM as US warns of Iran-backed threats, IRGC-QF head visits - Foundation for Defense of Democracies - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- Saudi Arabia and Iraq Are Caught in a Hidden War Within the War - WSJ - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- A long-shuttered Iraq-Syria border crossing reopens for the first time in more than a decade - AP News - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- Iraq in the Vice - International Crisis Group - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- IEA calls for Iraq-Turkey pipeline to bypass Hormuz and boost Europes energy security - investingLive - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- Iraq Shiite alliance names Bassem al-Badry as PM nominee - The Times of Israel - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- Iraq aims to select new PM as US warns of Iran-backed threats, IRGC-QF head visits - Long War Journal - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- Turkey Joins UAE, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Bahrain, Oman, Jordan, And Other Middle Eastern Nations In Uniting For Tourism Recovery, Despite A Notable Drop... - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- US urges contractor to evacuate workers from Kuwait and Iraq over worries of Iran-backed attacks - The Guardian - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- US halts security ties, dollar flows to Iraq in pressure over militias - middle-east-online.com - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- Driven by the pressures of war, Iran gives its field commanders more power over militias in Iraq - AccessWDUN - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- Turkey confronts legacy of ISIS expansion in Syria and Iraq - The Arab Weekly - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]
- Iraq says oil exports to resume from all fields within days, state news agency - Reuters - April 21st, 2026 [April 21st, 2026]