When Maryam Hoseini was a student in Tehran, security guards frequently stopped them, insisting they cover their bleached, curly hair with a hijab. Each time, the artist signed a commitment letter, promising to comply but continued to ignore the official demand. ‘From the very moment you come of age, you are dealing with patriarchal oppression and censorship,’ Hoseini reflects. This daily act of resistance sheds light on the work of the now New York-based artist, whose vibrant, fractured, and deeply layered paintings challenge conventional ideas of gender and sexuality to uncover new hybridized, figurative forms.
Hoseini moved to the United States in 2014 to study at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Bard College simultaneously, and they now co-chair an MFA painting program at the latter. Three years after their arrival, in 2017, former US president Donald Trump introduced a travel ban targeting migrants and refugees from six countries, including Iran. The executive order effectively trapped the artist in the US, cutting Hoseini off from their family: ‘For years I couldn’t travel; it felt captive.’ The experience of ‘living in a place that is and is not your home’ is reflected in the liminality of Hoseini’s paintings, which open a space where ‘new meanings and forms of representation’ can be negotiated. ‘I’m fascinated by ideas of where we belong. My paintings have a groundlessness, a collapse of time and space, where there’s tension between abstraction and representation, shifting perspectives and layers.’