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MassArt to Participate in Citywide Open Studios Event On March 1

Woman sitting on stool with artwork
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
  • MassArt in the Media
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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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