About the Project

   
             32 Years Later: The Legacy of Chinese Intercountry Adoption is an ongoing series of portraits that focuses on themes of self-definition, growth, and resilience among Chinese transnational adoptees. Following the Chinese Government’s recent and sudden decision to end their foreign adoption policy, over 160,000 of us worldwide are now left to reflect on its three decades of history and nonexistent future. This conversation is extremely complex and important within contemporary dialogue, intersecting with issues of immigration, citizenship, and cultural representation. 32 Years Later recognizes the individuals impacted by the personal and political legacy of this history, analyzes how we as adoptees collectively fit under this shared identity, and celebrates the ways we have grown beyond it. For me, this represents one of the community’s many efforts to connect and heal as a diaspora of displaced peoples.


Isabella Kahn is a Chinese lens-based artist from New Jersey and is currently completing her Bachelors of Science in Photography at Drexel University. Her practice navigates tension between personal history and global memory as a transnational, transracial adoptee, highlighting themes of identity, displacement, and family.

Isabella has shown her work in several cities, including Philadelphia, New York, Boston, and London, and her work can be found in the International Center of Photography’s permanent collection. She has also co-curated photographic exhibitions at the Photography Gallery at the University of the Arts and the Copeland Gallery in South London.

Other work can be viewed here.