Photographs by
James Mollison
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Traveling Exhibitions
Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
One can learn a lot about a child by looking at their face, dress, or body language, but to really understand
what matters most to a child, one must enter that private sanctuary: their bedroom.
In his remarkable series of photographs Where Children Sleep, Mollison invites us to study the extreme
diversity of children’s sleeping places in many different countries. Each detailed study of a child’s
“bedroom” is accompanied by a studio-styled portrait of the child. We see Ahkôhxet, a Kraho boy who
sleeps on the floor of a hut deep in the Amazon jungle; Scottish punk Rhiannon who sports a mohawk
just like her parents; Bilal, a Bedouin shepherd boy who sleeps outdoors with his father’s herd of goats;
Indira, a Nepali girl who has worked in a granite quarry since she was three; and, among others, Risa,
a Geisha-in-training from Kyoto who shares the floor of a tea room with five other girls.
While Mollison created the exhibition for pre-adolescent viewers, the social, typological and cultural
issues described in the work are meaningful to an adult audience. Economic inequality, children’s
rights, and how we are defined by our possessions and formed by our circumstances are some of the
complex issues that resonate in Mollison’s work.
Right:
installation view
Cover credits:
see image captions
pages 3, 12, 16, 19;
title text detail from
publication cover,
Chris Boot, 2010
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Indira, 7, Kathmandu, Nepal
Indira lives with her parents, brother and
sister near Kathmandu in Nepal. Her house
has only one room, with one bed and one
mattress. At bedtime, the children share
the mattress on the floor. Indira is seven
years old and has worked at the local
granite quarry since she was three. The
family is very poor so everyone has to
work. There are 150 other children working
at the quarry, some of whom will lose their
sight because they do not have goggles
to protect their eyes from stone splinters.
Indira works five or six hours a day and
then helps her mother with household
chores such as cleaning and cooking. Her
favourite food is noodles. She also attends
school, which is a thirty minute walk away.
She does not mind working at the quarry
but would prefer to be playing. She would
like to be a Nepalese dancer when she
grows up.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Jazzy, 4, Kentucky, USA
Jasmine prefers to be called by her nick-
name, Jazzy. She lives in a big house in
Kentucky, USA with her parents and three
brothers. Her house is in the countryside,
surrounded by farmland. Her bedroom is
full of crowns and sashes which she has
won in child pageants. She is only four
years old and has already entered over a
hundred of these competitions. Her spare
time is completely taken up with prepara-
tion and rehearsal. She practises her stage
routines every day with a trainer who
teaches her new steps. Each weekend,
she participates in a different pageant,
arriving on Friday afternoon, performing
on Saturday, and attending the crowning
ceremony on Sunday. By the end of the
show, she is quite exhausted. Jazzy enjoys
being pampered and treated like a prin-
cess — having her hair done and wearing
pretty clothes and make-up with false
nails and a fake tan. It is a very expensive
hobby and can cost her parents a thousand
dollars for each pageant she takes part in.
Jazzy would like to be a rock star when
she grows up.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Romanian boy, 4, Rome, Italy
Home for this four-year-old boy and his
family is a mattress in a field on the
outskirts of Rome, Italy. The family came
from Romania by bus after begging on
the streets for enough money to pay for
their tickets (100 per adult and 80 per
child). When they first arrived in Rome,
they camped in a tent, but the police threw
them off the site because they were tres-
passing on private land and did not have
the correct documents. Now the family
sleep together on the mattress in the open.
When it rains, they hastily erect a tent and
use umbrellas for shelter, hoping they will
not be spotted by the police. They left
Romania without identity documents or
work papers and so are unable to obtain
legal employment. This boy sits by the
kerbside while his parents clean car
windscreens at traffic lights, to earn thirty
to fifty cents a time. No one from the boy’s
family has ever been to school. His parents
cannot read or write.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Justin, 8, New Jersey, USA
Eight-year-old Justin is passionate about
sport, and his bedroom is decorated with a
sports theme. He plays American football,
basketball and baseball, and is active
throughout the year, changing sports
according to the season. During the
football season he has to practise three
times a week. This is his favourite sport.
He has played for his local junior football
team since the age of five. Justin’s parents
give him a lot of encouragement despite
the expensive kit they have to provide for
him. He goes to school on the school bus
with other children from his neighbour-
hood. The family lives in New Jersey, USA,
in a four-bedroomed house, and they
spend two weeks each summer on holiday
on the Caribbean island of St Thomas.
Justin has high expectations for his future.
He would like to become the mayor of New
Jersey. But if not, he would settle for being
a poker player.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Alyssa, Appalachia, Kentucky, USA
Alyssa lives with her parents in Ken-
tucky, USA. She is an only child but her
grandmother, uncle and orphaned cousin
live close by. It is a beautiful, mountain-
ous region known as Appalachia but one
of the poorest parts ot America. Their
small, shabby house, heated only by a
wooden stove, is falling apart. The ceiling
in Alyssa’s bedroom is beginning to cave
in. The family would like to buy a caravan
instead, if they could afford it. Alyssa’s
mother works at McDonald’s and her
father works at Walmart, and everything
they earn goes towards bringing up their
daughter. She is lucky that her parents
have jobs, even though they earn very
little. Many local families are unemployed
and have to rely on charity. There is a huge
problem with drug misuse in the area, and
two of Alyssa’s relatives have already died
from drug-related problems.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Ahkôhxet, 8, Amazon Basin, Brazil
Ahkôhxet is eight years old and a member
of the Kraho tribe, who live in the basin of
the river Amazon, in Brazil. There are only
1,900 members of the tribe. The Kraho
people believe that the sun and moon were
creators of the universe, and they engage
in rituals that are many centuries old. The
red paint on Ahkôhxet’s chest is from one
of his tribe’s rituals. The elders teach
Ahkôhxet’s generation to respect nature
and their surroundings. Their huts are
arranged in a circle, leaving space in the
middle for gatherings and ceremonies to
take place. The nearby river provides water
for drinking and washing. The tribe grow
half their food in the poor soil using basic
tools. They also hunt. The rest of their food
is bought using money earned from film
crews and photographers who visit their
camp. There is one car shared between the
whole tribe.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Dong, 9, Yunnan, China
Dong is nine years old. He lives in the
province of Yunnan in Southwest China,
with his parents, sister and grandfather.
He shares a room with his sister and
parents. They are a poor family who own
just enough land to grow their own rice
and sugar cane. Dong’s school is twenty a
minutes walk away. He especially enjoys
writing and singing. Most evenings, he
spends one hour completing his home-
work and one hour watching television.
His parents have to pay for his books and
uniform but his tuition is free because he
comes from a rural area. Dong’s mother is
pleased that her son can have an educa-
tion, something she herself never had.
Dong’s favourite food is pork, sweets and
ice cream, but the family also eat other
meat, fish and vegetables. When he is
older, Dong would like to be a policeman,
because he’ll be able to “catch thieves
and run around”.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Delanie, 9, New Jersey, USA
Nine-year-old Delanie lives with her
parents and younger brother and sister
in a large house in New Jersey, USA. The
children all have their own bedrooms.
Delanie is very fussy about her appearance
and she often takes hours in the evening
choosing what to wear the next day. She
and her brother travel to school together
on the school bus, a journey of about ten
minutes, but she does not like to sit with
him. She enjoys seeing her friends in
class but hates schoolwork. She only has
fifteen minutes of homework each night
but always leaves it until the last moment.
Delanie’s hobbies are shopping and
dancing. She goes to church regularly and
enjoys the happy atmosphere. When she
grows up she would like to be a fashion
designer and design her own clothes.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Tzvika, 9, Beitar Illit, the West Bank
Tzvika is nine years old and lives in Beitar
Illit, an Israeli settlement in the West Bank.
It is a gated community of thirty-six
thousand Haredi (Orthodox) Jews, who live
their lives according to a strict religious
code set out in the Jewish holy book, the
Talmud. Televisions and newspapers are
banned from the settlement. The average
family has nine children, but Tzvika has
just one sister and two brothers, with
whom he shares his room. Like all good
Haredi boys, Tzvika reveres God and wants
to become a rabbi when he is older. He
lives in a modern apartment block and is
taken by car to school, a two-minute drive
away. Religion is the most important sub-
ject, followed by Hebrew and maths. Sport
is banned from the curriculum. Tzvika goes
to the library every day and enjoys reading
the holy scriptures. All the books in the
library are religious books. Tzvika also likes
to play religious games on his computer.
His favourite food is schnitzel and chips.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Jamie, 9, New York, New York, USA
Jaime is nine years old. He lives in a top-
floor apartment on Fifth Avenue in New
York. His parents also own luxury homes in
Spain and in the Hamptons on Long Island.
He has a younger brother and sister who
are twins. Places at Jaime’s school are
greatly sought after, even though the fees
are very high. Jaime had to pass several
tests before he was accepted. He is doing
very well at his studies and particularly
enjoys computer class, spelling and wood-
work, but not geometry. He has an hour’s
homework each night and often finds it
hard to fit this in with his other after-school
activities. Wednesdays are particularly
busy as he has judo and swimming
lessons. In his spare time, apart from
playing the cello and kickball, Jaime likes
to study his finances on the Citibank
website. When he grows up, he would
like to be a lawyer like his father.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Lamine, 12, Senegal
Lamine is twelve years old and lives in a
village in Senegal, western Africa. He is a
pupil at the village Koranic school, where
no girls are allowed. He shares a room
with several other boys from the school.
The beds are very basic and uncomfort-
able, some supported by bricks for legs. At
six o’clock every morning the boys begin
work on the school farm. Depending on the
season of the year, they are taught digging,
harvesting maize or how to plough the
fields using donkeys. In the afternoon, they
study the Koran, the holy book from which
Islam is derived, learning to recite its
verses from wooden tablets. They have the
same teacher for all their lessons. Lamine
enjoys school but finds the farming lessons
hard work and very hot. In his free time,
he likes to play football with his friends.
When Lamine grows up he would like to be
a teacher.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Joey, 11, Kentucky, USA
Joey lives in Kentucky, USA, with his
parents and older sister. He is eleven years
old. He regularly accompanies his father
on hunts. He owns two shotguns and a
crossbow and made his first kill — a deer
— at the age of seven. He is hoping to
use his crossbow during the next hunting
season as he has become tired of using a
gun. He loves the outdoor life and hopes
to continue hunting into adulthood. His
family always cook and eat the meat from
the animal they have shot. Joey does
not agree that an animal should be killed
just for sport. When he is not out hunting,
Joey attends school and enjoys watching
television with his pet bearded dragon
lizard, Lily.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Prena, 14, Kathmandu, Nepal
Prena lives in Kathmandu, Nepal. Her
room is a tiny, cell-like space at the top
of the house where she is employed as a
domestic worker. Her diet is mainly rice
and vegetables. She is fourteen years old
and one of thousands of child domestic
workers in the country. Prena carries out
household chores such as sweeping,
cleaning, cooking and washing. She starts
work at five in the morning and finishes at
six in the evening. For this, she earns five
hundred Nepali rupees per month (about
$6.50). She sends the money back to her
parents, who have eight other children
to support. Prena visits her family twice
a year. She goes to school three times a
week — which is the main highlight in
her life. She admires her teacher, who has
made it his mission to educate children
like Prena. She would like to be a doctor
when she is older.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
Risa, 15, Kyoto, Japan
Risa is fifteen years old and lives with
thirteen other women in a teahouse in
Kyoto, Japan. She and five others sleep in
a room that is also used as a dining room
and tea room. She left her family in Tokyo
a year ago after she saw a TV programme
about geishas and decided she wanted
to become one. Geishas are hostesses
who entertain high-paying male guests by
performing traditional Japanese arts. Risa
is now a maiko — a young girl who has
passed the test to train as a geisha — and
has been given a new name, Tomoyuki.
She will have to train rigorously, with daily
lessons in singing, dancing, playing
Japanese drums, tea-making and master-
ing elegant Kyoto elocution. She spends
two hours a day practising how to wrap
her kimono, arrange her hair and apply
make-up. She is the youngest maiko in
Japan. Risa has two days’ holiday each
month and visits her family three times a
year. She often gets homesick.
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
“From the start, I didn’t want it just to be about ‘needy children’ in the
developing world, but rather something more inclusive, about children
from all types of situations. It seemed to make sense to photograph the
children themselves, too, but separately from their bedrooms, using a
neutral background.” — James Mollison
A RT IST BIOG RAP HY
James Mollison was born in Kenya in 1973 and grew up in England. After studying art and design at
Oxford Brookes, and later film and photography at Newport School of Art and Design, he moved to Italy
to work at Benetton’s creative lab, Fabrica. His work has been widely published throughout the world
in Colors, The New York Times Magazine, the Guardian magazine, The Paris Review, The New Yorker, Le
Monde, and elsewhere. Mollison has lived in Venice, Italy since 2003.
N UMBER OF WORKS
52 photographs (26 portraits, 26 bedrooms)
TO UR DATES
Through July 2016
PARTICIPATION FEE
$13,500 for eight (8) weeks
F R AME SIZES
Portraits: 23.6 x 28.8 in (60 x 73 cm)
Bedrooms: 43.3 x 53.5 in (110 x 136 cm)
S PACE REQU IREMENTS
288 linear feet (87.78 linear meters)
EXHIBITION SIGNAG E
CATE provides mounted text panels and item labels, and museums wishing to design and fabricate text
panels and/or object labels can request digital source files.
S UPPORT MATERIAL S
Publication, Where Children Sleep (Chris Boot, November 2010)
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Where Children Sleep — James Mollison
“As much as the project is about the quirkiness of childhood, it is, more
strikingly, a commentary on class and on poverty. But the diversity also
provides a sense of togetherness.” — The New York Times
Installation view
C ura torial As s is tance Trave lin g E x h ib it io n s ( C AT E ) is a nonprofit organization
dedicated to creating opportunities for access, outreach, and education in the visual arts through the
origination and circulation of diverse and innovative exhibitions for museums and art organizations
worldwide. CATE fosters collaborations between public and private resources by developing traveling
exhibitions that expand public opportunities to view and experience significant works of art. Formed in
2000, CATE has toured more than 400 exhibitions to over 850 art venues worldwide.
11 3 E A S T U N IO N S T R E E T w w w. cu rat or i al . com
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