In the luminous expanse of the Irene Y. Panagopoulos Collection’s newly inaugurated space, the group exhibition Fernweh, or Nostalgia for Unknown Lands unfolds like a beautifully annotated atlas of human longing. Archive panels drift outward like the gentle turning of a book’s pages, guiding the visitor through five distinct narrative chapters. From Romanticism’s idealized visions of Greek antiquity to the existential introspections of The Journey of Being, the exhibition reveals a collection shaped not merely by objects, but by the restless, deeply human desire to reach beyond the known.
It is a rare experience to witness an archive breathe so vividly—its international holdings stretching across centuries and continents, yet unified by a poetic ache for elsewhere. Fernweh becomes more than a curatorial theme; it is the gravitational force that binds this constellation of artworks, artifacts, manuscripts, and maps. Whether confronting the stark realities of war and displacement or imagining utopias beyond the present, each section invites the viewer into a layered conversation between history and personal imagination.
The collection, as presented here, is not static preservation but active interpretation—a space where memory, geography, and identity interlace. In this great white, uplifting space, the archive does not merely store knowledge; it sings of the vast and unknowable world beyond.