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    Aziz Hazara: Coming Home

    Aziz Hazara: Coming Home

    Sep 19–Dec 21, 2026

    • Images
    • Text
    • Sponsors

    Opening Reception: Fri, Sep 18, 2026, 6–8pm

    During the US-led NATO occupation of Afghanistan from 2001–21, the American military established a complex multinational supply chain to sustain what resembled a suburban enclave around Bagram Airfield, near Kabul. The compound was complete with fast-food franchises, recreation centers, a boardwalk, swimming pools, and tax-free retail stores stocked with consumer goods. Aziz Hazara: Coming Home seeks to return material discarded in Afghanistan following the American military’s abrupt withdrawal.

    Working with networks of local brokers, scrap dealers, and intermediaries who had long operated around the airfield’s waste economy, Aziz Hazara selectively gathered items ranging from kneepads and uniforms to electronics, exercise equipment, recreational tools, kitchenware, tents, and fragments of infrastructure. The task required navigating bureaucratic ambiguities, political instability, and shifting regimes of surveillance, all while assembling and cataloging the material. While most of the discarded items were absorbed into local markets or appropriated by the new government, Hazara preserved a small portion of objects to return to their place of origin, reversing the logistical route that brought them to Afghanistan.

    Hazara’s work is an archaeology of what is left behind after war ends. At SculptureCenter, the hundreds of items comprising Coming Home offer a glimpse into the material remnants of a war waged on the other side of the world. The objects record everyday life in a military outpost, bringing into focus the massive human, environmental, and material dimensions of a conflict that Americans primarily experienced through images. Although the exhibition consists of debris—discarded objects from a distant site—it serves as an active and durational engagement with the simple gesture of return, complicated by the infrastructure and legacies of US intervention.

    The presentation at SculptureCenter will mark the first time the full body of collected material has been shown. In a moment when the war in Afghanistan is once again being reassessed in light of subsequent conflicts, Coming Home brings its legacy into the public view.

    Aziz Hazara: Coming Home is curated by Sohrab Mohebbi, Director.

    Aziz Hazara (b. 1992, Wardak, Afghanistan) is an interdisciplinary artist working across various mediums, including photography, video, sound, and multimedia installation. His work explores themes of surveillance, material culture, and supply chains within the context of power relations, geopolitics, and the panopticon. Select solo and group exhibitions include To Carry at the 16th Sharjah Biennial, Sharjah, UAE (2025); the 18th Biennale de l'Image en Mouvement: A Cosmic Movie Camera at the Centre d’Art Contemporain, Geneva (2024); Is It Morning for You Yet? at the 58th Carnegie International, Pittsburgh (2022); Penumbra, Venice (2022); the Busan Biennale (2020); and NIRIN at the 22nd Biennale of Sydney (2020). Hazara’s work is held in the public collections of institutions such as Tate Modern, London; SMAK, Ghent; Guggenheim Abu Dhabi; KNMA, New Delhi; the Sharjah Art Foundation; and the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh.

    Sponsors

    Support for Aziz Hazara: Coming Home is provided by Carla Chammas and Judi Roaman.

    Support for all of SculptureCenter’s work with artists from abroad is provided by the International Council: Anonymous, Stephen Cheng, Yan Du, Thomas Berger, Shareen Khattar, Kenneth Tan, Füsun Eczacıbaşı - SAHA, Antonio Murzi and Diana Morgan, Yuan Han Li, and Audrey Rose Smith and Vicente Muñoz.

    Leadership support for SculptureCenter’s exhibitions and programs is provided by Carol Bove, Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Foundation, Barbara von Portatius, and Teiger Foundation. Major support is provided by Richard Chang, Jill and Peter Kraus, Miyoung Lee and Neil Simpkins, Eleanor Heyman Propp, Jacques Louis Vidal, and The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Generous support is provided by Candy and Michael Barasch, Jane Hait and Justin Beal, Gabrielle Humphrey, Amy and Sean Lyons, Lily Lyons, Ronay and Richard Menschel, Poppy Pulitzer, and Alexander S.C. Rower. Additional funding is provided by Ben Ackerley, Charmaine and Roman Mendoza, Matt and Elizabeth Quigley, Katharine Ristich, Julien Sarkozy, Carla Shen, Kristina Wong Foster, and Lisa Young and Steven Abraham.

    Leadership support for SculptureCenter’s annual operations is provided by the Lambent Foundation Fund of Tides Foundation. Major support is provided by Irene and Allen H. Brill, the Hartwig Art Foundation, and the A. Woodner Fund. Generous support is provided by Andrew Fine and David Andersson, Zenas Hutcheson/The Knox Foundation, Marinela Samourkas, our Board of Trustees, and many charitable individuals and friends.

    SculptureCenter’s programming and operations are supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and Queens Borough President Donovan Richards.