Domestic Displacement, curated by Giulia Ingarao and Antonio Leone, is a group exhibition exploring contemporary forms of displacement: physical, cultural, and symbolic. Bringing together fifteen international artists at the MAC Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Ludovico Corrao, the project investigates themes of migration, memory, identity, vulnerability, and the unstable relationship between individuals and places.Within this framework, William Kentridge presents Porter Series: Espagne Ancienne (Porter with Dividers) (2001–2008) and I Ask This Stone (2023), works that reflect on fragmented histories, colonial memory, and the continuous rewriting of landscapes and identities through images and traces. His layered drawings and collages evoke unstable geographies shaped by time, erasure, and transformation. Shirin Neshat addresses the fracture between homeland and exile, exploring questions of identity, belonging, and the tensions between personal experience and collective histories. Her work examines how displacement affects the body, language, and cultural memory. Paolo Icaro, with Personae (1991), investigates vulnerability and the loss of individuality through sculpture. Moving beyond traditional forms, the work reflects on violence, depersonalization, and the ways historical conflicts leave traces on both bodies and collective consciousness. Together, these practices contribute to the exhibition’s reflection on how to inhabit a world defined by instability, transformation, and constant negotiation.