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Koerner Lecture 2026 with Hangama Amiri

Stauffer Library (Room 014),
101 Union St
5 March 2026
6:00–8:00 pm

Hangama Amiri is the 2026 Koerner Artist-in-Residence in Queen’s BFA (Visual Art) Program

A Room of One's Own: A Look into the Private Spaces

Looking at domestic spaces of Afghan women both in the diaspora and from Afghanistan, and how their interior spaces formed as a shared, communal, celebratory, mourning and as a space that shows resilience.

Biography

Hangama Amiri holds an MFA from Yale University where she graduated in 2020 from the Painting and Printmaking Department. She received her BFA from NSCAD University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and is a Canadian Fulbright and Post-Graduate Fellow at Yale University School of Art and Sciences (2015-2016). She is also a Kaiserring Stapendiatin of 2023 by Monchehaus Museum in Goslar, Germany. Her recent exhibitions include Parting at the Esker Foundation (2025), Calgary, Alberta; Toronto Biennial: Precarious Joy (2025), Toronto, ON, A Quiet Resistance (2023) at Monchehaus Museum, Goslar, Germany, A Homage to Home (2023) at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT; Sharjah Biennial 15: Thinking Historically in the Present (2023), Sharjah, UAE; Reminiscences (2022) at Union Pacific in London; Henna Night/ Shabe Kheena (2022) at David B. Smith Gallery, Denver, CO; Mirrors and Faces (2021) at Cooper Cole Gallery, Toronto; Wandering Amidst the Colors (2021) at Albertz Benda, New York, NY; Spectators of a New Dawn (2021), Towards Gallery, Toronto; and Bazaar: A Recollection of Home (2020) at T293 Gallery, Rome, Italy.

Amiri works predominantly in textiles to examine notions of home, as well as how gender, social norms, and larger geopolitical conflict impact the daily lives of women, both in Afghanistan and in the diaspora. Continuing to use textiles as the medium, Amiri searches to define, explore, and question these spaces. The figurative tendency in her work is due to her interest in the power of representation, especially of those objects that are ordinary to our everyday life, such as a passport, a vase, or celebrity postcards.

This residency and lecture are made possible by the generous support of The Michael & Sonja Koerner Charitable Foundation.
A south asian woman wearing a black top poses in art studio.

Portrait of Hangama Amiri. Photo: Sabrina Santiago

Footnotes
Image Credits

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