不良研究所

Manetti Shrem Museum Fall 2025 Exhibitions Explore the Borderlands; Environmental Justice

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Neon sign with orange on black background
Manetti Shrem Museum installation view of Julio C茅sar Morales, Las L铆neas 2028, 2022, 1845, and 1640 (2022). Courtesy of the artist and Gallery Wendi Norris, San Francisco. (Photo courtesy of the Manetti Shrem Museum. 漏 Muzi Li Rowe)

Quick Summary

  • 鈥極JO鈥 Julio C茅sar Morales, Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice consider our shared future

Two exhibitions that invite visitors to reflect on the present by considering the past and our shared future are on view this fall at the  at 不良研究所. The exhibitions are on view through Nov. 29. 

鈥淥JO鈥 Julio C茅sar Morales explores the U.S.-Mexico border as a lived human experience. Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice, a groundbreaking group exhibition from the Hammer Museum at UCLA, connects social and environmental injustice. A free public opening celebration with artists and curators, art making and music takes place from 2 to 5 p.m. at the museum Sunday, Sept. 28, coinciding with the start of the university鈥檚 academic year. 

Drawing of student holding "strike" poster
In the Manetti Shrem exhibition "Breathe" is: Yoshitomo Nara, School Strike for Climate, 2019. Acrylic on canvas, 47 1/4 脳 43 5/16 in. (120 脳 110 cm). (Keizo Kioku; image courtesy of the artist, Yoshitomo Nara Foundation.)

Exhibitions on view through Nov. 29; opening celebration Sept. 28

 

鈥淥JO鈥 Julio C茅sar Morales

After more than a decade in Arizona working as a senior curator and a museum director, this midcareer survey marks Morales鈥 California homecoming and return to full-time studio practice. The Bay Area artist draws from real-life narratives 鈥 including his family's experience from both sides of the border 鈥 found materials and detritus of crossings to traverse the border鈥檚 geopolitical history while imagining speculative futures. 鈥淥JO鈥 Julio C茅sar Morales comprises more than 50 works. Using a range of media including video, prints, watercolors, sculpture and photography, Morales approaches the harsh realities of the border with sensitivity, telling difficult stories in a quiet, deliberate way that honors their complexity.

  • An outdoor neon work, tomorrow is for those who can hear it coming, (2025), welcomes visitors to the museum.
  • The print series OJO: Los Extranjeros (El Paso 1938) (2025) incorporates source imagery from Dorothea Lange鈥檚 documentary photography of migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.
  • Morales鈥 watercolor series, Undocumented Interventions (2010-2011), illustrates covert and often dangerous methods used to cross the border without documentation.

Manetti Shrem Museum Founding Director Rachel Teagle first showed Morales鈥 work in a solo exhibition at the San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art in 2004.  It is an honor to bring the deeply thoughtful work of Julio C茅sar Morales to the Manetti Shrem Museum,鈥 Teagle said. 鈥淚n his exquisite and complex embrace of the bilingual and bicultural border experience, Julio contributes to a conversation that is crucial to our world today.鈥

Morales鈥 artwork has been widely exhibited, including at the Lyon Biennale, France; Istanbul Biennale, Turkey; Singapore Biennale, Singapore; Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt, Germany; Prospect 3, New Orleans; SFMOMA, San Francisco; Perez Art Museum, Miami; Museo Tamayo, Mexico City; Museo del Barrio, New York City; The Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; The Armory Show, New York; and Gallery Wendi Norris, San Francisco. He received his bachelor of fine arts degree from San Francisco Art Institute. , and learn more about a complementary exhibition, at Gallery Wendi Norris in San Francisco (Sept. 19鈥揘ov. 1).

鈥淥JO鈥 Julio C茅sar Morales is curated by Rachel Teagle.

neon sign saying tomorrow is for those who can hear it coming
On view at the Manetti Shrem Museum's plaza is a public commission: Julio C茅sar Morales, tomorrow is for those who can hear it coming, 2025. Neon, acrylic panels, plywood. See Morales' work inside too. (Hung Q. Pham Photography)

Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice

The lungs of our planet 鈥 oceans, forests and the atmosphere 鈥 are under threat, invaded by carbon emissions, plastics and man-made pollutants. The act of breathing was rendered even more perilous by the COVID-19 pandemic and encounters with escalated police violence that became a focus of the COVID period. Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice considers the connections between social and environmental injustice through the lens of contemporary art. The exhibition is traveling from the Hammer Museum at UCLA, where it was part of , the recent collaborative arts event across Southern California organized by Getty that included more than 50 exhibitions across 74 institutions.

The Manetti Shrem Museum鈥檚 iteration of the exhibition features 14 artists from different backgrounds, showing the global scale and impact of the climate crisis, while also pointing toward the importance of coming together in community across borders. The works on exhibit focusing on climate change are by artists, scientists and activists whose practices encompass photography, multimedia, large-scale sculptures, painting and more.

  • Multidisciplinary artist Cannupa Hanska Luger鈥檚 site-specific, multi-part installation Sovereign relates to his ongoing Future Ancestral Technologies, which blends Indigenous wisdom with science fiction speculations. The installation was commissioned specially for Breath(e) and made possible in part by VIA Art Fund.
  • Clarissa Tossin uses evidence of our current environmental crisis to create monuments to the often-invisible consequences of climate change, as with Rising Temperature Casualty (Prunus persica, home garden, Los Angeles) (2022). This sculpture is a silicone cast of a peach tree that died due to excessive heat and chronic drought in Tossin鈥檚 personal garden in Los Angeles.
  • Scientist and artist Brandon Balleng茅e makes portraits of marine species that have been driven to extinction by human-caused disasters such as the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, using the oil itself as his medium. 

Exhibiting artists: Brandon Balleng茅e, Mel Chin, Tiffany Chung, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Michael Joo, Xin Liu, Cannupa Hanska Luger, Yoshitomo Nara, Roxy Paine, Garnett Puett, Sandy Rodriguez, Sarah Rosalena, Clarissa Tossin and Jin-me Yoon.

Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice is organized by the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, and guest curated by Glenn Kaino and Mika Yoshitake with Jennifer Buonocore-Nedrelow, PST Fellow. It is on view Aug. 7鈥揘ov. 29, 2025.

Breath(e): Toward Climate and Social Justice is made possible through lead grants from Getty as part of their PST Art: Art & Science Collide initiative. For more info on PST ART, please visit 

The exhibition is made possible in part by Conservation International. 

Highlights of public programs

Dedicated public programming is planned in conjunction with the fall exhibitions. Visit  for more details. All programs are free.

  • Fall Season Celebration: Opening event featuring exhibiting artists including Julio C茅sar Morales and curators; a DJ set by artist Juan Luna-Avin; and an eco-friendly art activity. (Sept. 28)
  • Campus Community Book Project: This event brings together the evocative visual narratives in the exhibition 鈥OJO鈥 Julio Cesar Morales with the deeply personal journey chronicled in Javier Zamora鈥檚 acclaimed memoir Solito. (Nov. 4)
  • Breath, Soil, Water, Life: A live meditation on breath, identity, resistance and the power of listening responding to LaToya Ruby Frazier鈥檚 photo series Flint is Family in Three Acts. The culminating performance is by 不良研究所 students in the Major Voices in Black World Literature course. (Nov. 13)
  • Art Spark: Drop-in weekend art making offers a different activity each month that explores ideas, materials, and processes connected to works of art on view. Special guests from across 不良研究所 join on Oct. 18 and Nov. 1 to delve into science-meets-art themes. (Through Nov. 29)

Visitor Information

Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art

254 Old Davis Road, Davis, California, 95616

Admission is Free for All.

Art Wide Open

is a contemporary art museum for today, committed to honoring the past and shaping the future while making art accessible and approachable to all. It builds on 不良研究所鈥 legacy of exceptional teaching and practice of the arts to offer engaging experiences, exhibitions and educational programs that reflect and serve the community. One-third of the museum鈥檚 30,000-square-foot space is devoted to instruction, including a lecture hall, classroom space and the drop-in Carol and Gerry Parker Art Studio. Opened in November 2016, the museum has earned numerous architectural honors, including being named one of the 25 Best Museum Buildings of the Past 100 Years by ART news. 

Media Resources

Media contact, images

  • Laura Compton, Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, llcompton@ucdavis.edu
  • Publicity photos available to download 

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