Taraneh Hemami


Taraneh Hemami is an Iranian-American, visual artist and arts educator based in San Francisco, California, United States. Her works explore the complex cultural politics of exile through personal and collective, multidisciplinary projects often through site specific installation art or participatory engagement projects.

Biography

Born in Tehran, Iran, she moved to the United States in 1978 to attend college, right before the Iranian Revolution. In 1982, Hemami received her BFA degree in Painting and Drawing from University of Oregon, Eugene, and in 1991 her MFA degree in Painting from California College of the Arts, where she now teaches.
Hemami's work is often handcrafted and has included replicating government posters, shattered glass stylized as traditional Muslim prayer rugs, a laser-cut wool carpet map of Tehran and beaded curtains. By manipulating common Iranian and Western imagery used to gain power and spread political influence, Hemami's work is a commentary on how this is used across nations throughout history. In her work "Home", she created a multimedia body of work by collecting photographs and stories from Iranian Americans to explore themes of displacement and representation within a home.

Exhibitions

Hemami has exhibited at national and international venues as well as guest curated exhibitions, including the following:
Hemami's works have been collected internationally by major public collections including; the British Museum, the Victoria and Albert Museum, as well as many private collections. Hemami received a Creative Capital Award, Eureka fellowship award, Creative Work Fund, the San Francisco Arts Commission, California Council for the Humanities, San Francisco Foundation, and a Visions from the New California award. She has been in residence at the California Institute for Integral Studies , Djerassi Resident Artists Program, Montalvo Center for the Arts, Kala Art Institute, The Lab and the Center for Public Life at the California College of the Arts in Oakland, California.