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Meet MassArt Alumnus Jawad Farooq

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Scituate MA retailer offers peek at unique cultures. 

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Things to do around Boston this weekend and beyond

Split image: Left shows a white goat grazing among bushes in black and white. Right shows a horse lying on its side in a blurry, purplish rodeo scene. Text at bottom left reads 2023 MFA THESIS—a unique highlight for Boston events.
2025 MassArt MFA Thesis
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MassArt’s “2025 MFA Thesis Exhibition” was highlighted in the Boston Globe’s things to do around Boston. Throughout the exhibition, the artists investigate identity, its formation, expression, and destruction. The exhibition is happening through May 25 at MassArt x SoWA.

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Meet Claudio Eshun

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MassArt to Participate in Citywide Open Studios Event On March 1

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Aghigh Afkhami, a second-year MassArt MFA student studying photography, has been experimenting with graffiti and lines of text on her images. Photo by Yoko Zhu
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In an inaugural cross-institutional open studios event on Saturday, March 1, 2025, MassArt and its peers will offer a look at the practices of student artists working in Boston and foster an exchange between them and the broader community.

“Right now, it feels like a very vibrant time to be an artist in Boston, and I’m very hopeful for the kind of galleries and speakers and curators that are now in the city,” S. Billie Mandle, associate professor of photography at MassArt, said. “This is an attempt to bring all of our MFA students into that vibrancy, and to sort of break down some of the barriers that exist between the institutions and the larger communities.”

“Aghigh Afkhami, a second-year student in the photography MFA program at MassArt, creates images that conjure the past. Originally from Iran (where she also received her undergraduate degree), Afkhami describes her home country as “the land that shaped my being.” Afkhami’s work centers around homeland and memory. Achieved through mostly grayscale images, Afkhami’s series Lov captures acts of remembering and detachment, spurred by migration. She intentionally obscures the locations of her images using close crops of her subjects, often shooting in infrared or black and white. In some photos, Afkhami includes lines of text created by Sharpie or spray paint. In Iran, she explained, the government attempted to conceal political messages graffitied on walls. Despite their effort to erase the words, the writing still peeped through. When she came to America, Afkhami carried this thought. Now, she was experimenting with shrouding people in her photos, but not in totality. She still wants to leave a glimpse.”

“My work is mostly about me: my memories, my life experience, and at the same time, it’s about my generation in Iran,” Afkhami said. “There’s this huge struggle of youth, the economy, mandatory laws, and at the same time you’re trying to survive and experience the joy of life.”

“Next to Afkhami’s studio inside the Kennedy building at MassArt, Andrew Zou, also a second-year MassArt student, is working on a chronological series of photographs. In Zou’s To Love, To Remember, seasons provide the backdrop for images of Zou’s parents. Shot from 2020 to 2024, these photographs portray the annual transitions in Jiangxi Province, China. In summer, Zou’s parents shed their layers. In winter, they gain them back.”

Read the Boston Art Review article.

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MassArt Alumni and Friends Gather for Art-Filled Winter Getaway in the Berkshires

MassArt alumni and friends gathered in the Berkshires for an inspiring weekend of art, connection, and discussions on creativity.

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The Berkshires in Western, MA, are known for world-class cultural attractions, and MassArt alumni and friends gathered there recently for an unforgettable weekend of connection. Hosted by MassArt President Mary K. Grant and MassArt Alumni Relations, the itinerary featured innovative art and special programming centered around the solo exhibitions by artists Abelardo Morell (MassArt Professor Emeritus) at the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, MA, and Steve Locke BFA ’97, MFA ’01 (former MassArt professor) at MASS MoCA in North Adams, MA. 

“What a wonderful event! I got to meet other alumni who literally work down the street from me and have applied their creative frameworks to so many different types of careers, from exhibit preparation to art library leadership,” said Cecilia Hirsch (MFA ’95). “Hearing from President Grant and Abe Morell was so special — each shared such heart-warming appreciation and dedication to MassArt’s wide-reaching mission. I walked away, on this snowy January night, feeling such warmth and excitement about the future of MassArt and the generosity and talent it nurtures, from its students to its faculty.” 

Morell and Anne Leonard (Manton Curator of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs at the Clark Art Institute) treated the group to a guided walkthrough of Morell’s exhibition In the Company of Monet and Constable, where viewers are invited to see the world in new ways through the incorporation of camera obscura. 

Locke and Evan Garza (MassMOCA curator) inspired a thought-provoking discussion on racial violence in our country and the role of art in fostering reflection, dialogue, and a search for justice, sparked by Locke’s latest exhibition, the fire next time. The crowd was a wonderful mix of the MassArt community, including 40 students and some faculty, who joined the conversation.

“Our alumni are a shining example of the value and excellence of a MassArt education,” shared Vice President of Institutional Advancement and Executive Director of the MassArt Foundation Emily Foster Day. “It is always an honor to gather with this community to learn about and celebrate how our alumni are changing the world.” 

The MassArt alumni community is a network of more than 20,000 alumni worldwide. For more information on our MassArt alumni gatherings, visit https://massart.edu/alumni

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Fearless Creativity: MassArt Alumna Shares Lessons on Blending Design, Teaching, and Storytelling

Agata Stadnik, BFA' 04, MFA '09, recently wrote and illustrated her first children’s book, Walking to School Adventure.

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A woman with shoulder-length light brown hair, wearing a light pink shirt, stands outside in front of green foliage, holding up a children’s book titled Walking to School Adventure, ready to share her love of teaching and storytelling.

Keeping the Scrolls Turning: A Summer Abroad with Departure

MassArt alum and staff member, Clint Baclawski, MFA '08 Photography, shares his experience showing his art abroad and exploring Amsterdam with family.

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A smiling man and boy stand by a canal boat in a sunny city setting, enjoying their summer abroad. The boy wears a green Red Sox jersey and black shorts, while the man wears glasses, a black striped shirt, and a cap. People and trees fill the background.

Julian Phillips on Historic Architecture and the Power of Interdisciplinary Learning

Discover how Julian Phillips ’20 M.Arch uses his MassArt education in historic preservation, restoring iconic landmarks and uncovering untold architectural stories.

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Building the Future by Preserving the Past

Whether restoring a barn on Thomas Edison’s New Jersey property or working to preserve the Virginia home of Maggie Walker, the first Black woman in the United States to establish a bank, historical architect Julian Phillips touches a lot of history, literally. Phillips, who works at the Historic Architecture Conservation and Engineering Center (HACE), a division of the National Park Service, credits MassArt for providing the creative foundation for his unique career in historic preservation.

We want these buildings to last as artifacts for future generations — it’s our history, the told/untold. What we’re doing now is telling a more complete story. Julian Phillips M.Arch ’20

One of the first courses he took at MassArt was in early American furniture — an introduction to furniture design and also to historians, museum curators, and craftsmen. It directly helped him in his role at HACE. “HACE is extremely multidisciplinary, exactly like MassArt,” he says. “Conservators, architects, landscape architects, historians — we all work together. I learned the value of that at MassArt, how to not only appreciate the differences around me but also find similarities. All those people were in the same space and had done different things, and we came together and learned from one another.”

More stories

Fearless Creativity: MassArt Alumna Shares Lessons on Blending Design, Teaching, and Storytelling

Agata Stadnik, BFA' 04, MFA '09, recently wrote and illustrated her first children’s book, Walking to School Adventure.

View story
A woman with shoulder-length light brown hair, wearing a light pink shirt, stands outside in front of green foliage, holding up a children’s book titled Walking to School Adventure, ready to share her love of teaching and storytelling.

Keeping the Scrolls Turning: A Summer Abroad with Departure

MassArt alum and staff member, Clint Baclawski, MFA '08 Photography, shares his experience showing his art abroad and exploring Amsterdam with family.

View story
A smiling man and boy stand by a canal boat in a sunny city setting, enjoying their summer abroad. The boy wears a green Red Sox jersey and black shorts, while the man wears glasses, a black striped shirt, and a cap. People and trees fill the background.
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