Turn, Turn, Turn: Picturing Time

Ando Hiroshige, Japan (1797鈥1858), Shin Yoshiwara Naka-no-ch艒 yozakura [Cherry Blossoms at Night on Naka-no-ch艒 in the New Yoshiwara], c. 1840鈥1842, woodcut on paper, H: 13 1/2 in, W: 8 3/4 in. Gift of Helen Baker Jones, in memory of James H. Baker, 67.333.23.听Photo by Jeff Wells.听
August 5, 2025鈥揓uly 2026听
Can time be held, seen, reimagined?听
Turn, Turn, Turn invites viewers to consider how artists capture, challenge, and reshape our understandings of time. Through depictions of specific hours of the day, seasonal shifts, and historical moments, many artworks anchor the intangible in the material. Prints by William Hogarth and And艒鈥疕iroshige, for example, offer glimpses into daily life across different eras and geographies.听
Yet, the concept of time is much more challenging to render. Resisting linear and progress-driven notions of time, the works in this exhibition open pathways to alternate timelines that reclaim suppressed histories and imagine futures beyond Western colonial imposition. While Enrique Chagoya, Gade, and Patrick Nagatani propose alternate histories that prioritize cultural hybridity, others meditate on time鈥檚 fleeting nature through the trope of the memento mori.听听
Together, these works reveal time not as a fixed reality, but a notion shaped by perception, culture, and power.听听