The Albuquerque Museum announced today that it has acquired one of the award-winning and globally celebrated pink teeter-totters formerly installed at the U.S./Mexico border wall. 

The Teeter-Totter, created by architect Ronald Rael and designer Virginia San Fratello in 2019, has served as a highly visual beacon of social commentary concerning the treatment of migrants, the connection among citizens of both nations and societal change. The work has been installed in the Albuquerque Museumโ€™s permanent collection exhibition, Common Ground, which honors the artistic and cultural achievements of the U.S. Southwest.

When initially installed, the brightly colored teeter-totters allowed children from both sides of the border wall (between Sunland Park, N.M. and Ciudad Juรกrez), to play together and symbolically breach the division that the wall creates.

โ€œThe Teeter-Totter shook the world with its installation along the U.S./Mexico border wall, and we are honored to elevate that piece of international history at our museum,โ€ said Andrew Connors, Albuquerque Museum director. โ€œIn a state where immigration is such a large, often discussed issue, itโ€™s exciting to have this imperative piece of the conversation here in Albuquerque.โ€

โ€œChildren and adults were connected in meaningful ways on both sides, with the recognition that the actions that take place on one side have a direct consequence on the other side,โ€ said creators Rael and San Fratello in a social media post in 2019, following the original installation of the teeter-totters.