In this exhibition launched yesterday, 17 South Asian and Asian American artists explore America's immigration story through the H-1B visa which marks its 25th anniversary on November 29.
The artists use the H-1B visa as visual inspiration to comment on their immigration journeys. Works by the 17 featured artists depict the range of emotions-anxiety, dignity, isolation and opportunity-associated with living in America.
The artwork captures the experiences of people who come to America for the American dream, he said.
In a statement, Smithsonian museum said for the past 25 years, several generations of young scientists and engineers from all over Asia have come to be part of a "New America" and shape United States' culture of innovation and entrepreneurship.
For many, the H-1B visa is more than a piece of paper affixed in a passport; it determines so much of life in America and the opportunity to become American.
"My work traces everyday manifestations of the duality of belonging and alienation for families living here in the United States on this visa category," said artist Aishwariya.
"The exhibition illuminates an immigration status that often gets stereotyped or left out of dialogue around immigration in this United States," curator of the exhibition Masum Momaya was quoted as saying by the NBC news.
The US H1B visa is a non-immigrant visa that allows US companies to employ foreign workers in specialty occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise in specialized fields.
