February 18, 2025
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Binghamton University to be first major U.S. institution to host The Path of Tolerance exhibition

BINGHAMTON, NY—Binghamton University will host The Path of Tolerance, a sponsored public art exhibition featuring over 90 works of art from contributors worldwide. The exhibition will be on view from Sept. 29 through Oct. 9, on the Lois B. DeFleur Walkway, between the Glenn G. Bartle Library and the Fine Arts Building, on campus.

Binghamton University will be the first major institution to present the full Tolerance collection in the United States, and the first to exhibit the pieces directly on the ground.

This public exhibition originated from a larger project initiated by renowned graphic designer and illustrator Mirko Ilić, who will lead an opening tour of the exhibition at 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 29 on the Lois B. DeFleur Walkway.

This growing exhibition – initially starting with just 21 pieces and now boasting 93 – features artwork based on the theme of tolerance. Each artist is only given dimensions and minimal instructions to follow. Their piece must include their signature, the name of their country and the word “tolerance” in their own language.

To make this exhibition possible at Binghamton University, Blazo Kovacevic, associate professor of art and design, selected an appropriate location and printed the images onto specially made outdoor material. Prints will be installed directly onto the pavement as stickers along the Lois B. DeFleur Walkway for students to see while walking to class. Families and alumni will be able to see the artwork as well, as the exhibition is running through Family Weekend and Alumni Week.

Other collaborators have shown similar exhibitions all over the world. In Turkey prints were installed in a mall, in Madrid they hung off an overpass, and in Slovenia images were enlarged to fill billboards throughout the city.

For further information, contact Blazo Kovacevic at bkovacev@binghamton.edu. This exhibition is organized by the Binghamton University Department of Art and Design and is supported by the Elsie Rosefsky Memorial Endowment.

Posted in: Arts & Culture