I believe in this idea of junction-making. We can only solve some of the
big challenges of the 21st century if we go beyond the fear of pooling knowledge.
I want to continue because 
it's urgent. It is a time of planetary crisis.
–HANS-ULRICH OBRIST
Artistic Director
Serpentine Gallery

My two most recent installations, Driven From Their Homes and Arrival: The Rohingya, are anti-war travels and stories and a call to mercy. 

My work is a hybrid of installation sculpture and illusionist staging. The wonder of the installation sculpture is that it surrounds the viewer. I try to place the viewer in a series of scenes, so that he/she can travel with these refugees for a few moments. What interests me above all is accessibility. I try to express urgency and immediacy. I fervently hope that if I tell this story in sculpture, which is so tangible, it will become more present and more real for us. If we face the terrible truth of war, we may find a way to stop it. 

This video walks you through Harriet Diamond's moving installation sculpture depicting events of the Syrian diaspora.

I have exhibited bronze pieces at Brookgreen Garden in South Carolina, the National Sculpture Society in New York and the National Arts Club in New York. I have installed life-size stages at Norfolk International Airport and the Fitchburg Museum, Berkshire Museum, Springfield Museum, and Chesterwood, National Trust in Massachusetts. Recently, I set up my work at the Westport Art Center in Connecticut and the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center in Cape Cod."

Harriet Diamond is interviewed in the installation Driven From their Homes, an installation chronicling the Syrian diaspora.