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Parsons Advantageous Arts MFA College students Assist Us Navigate 2025

ArtsParsons Advantageous Arts MFA College students Assist Us Navigate 2025

There’s an plain heaviness to 2025. In her video work “What is Burden” (2025), artist Hannah Bang explores this weight. Projected onto the ultimate drawing, the four-hour piece captures the performer within the course of of constructing it, persevering with even because the paper steadily tears, enjoying with concepts of temporality and flux. How can artwork assist us navigate the troublesome modifications of 2025?

In Re:Turning, the Parsons Advantageous Arts MFA present curated by P! Krishnamurthy, college students like Bang strive their hand. The ensuing artworks don’t level out the plain, nor supply express political critique, as a lot as they gesture in direction of methods to bear the flux, to mourn it, to course of it, and perhaps discover an emotional heart to maintain coming again to.

Hannah Bang, “What is Burden?” (2025)

Andrew Samuel Harrison, as an illustration, creates sculptures that play with gravity. In “Hypervisibility: Systems of Support 5” (2024–25), a concrete slab leans precariously however stably in opposition to the wall. It calls for a double-take from a viewer — is that secure, or is it about to fall? — cleverly discovering an surprising heart. The lean takes on new layers of which means for Harrison as an artist navigating a congenital asymmetry between his left and proper sides brought on by Poland Syndrome, echoing the incongruous equilibrium present in a lot of his works.

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Andrew Samuel Harrison, “Hypervisibility: Systems of Support 5, (2024–25)

Sumaiya Saiyed offers a kinetic sculpture in which braided hair repeatedly twists upwards only to fall back down again. “I wanted to look at hair as a commodity and how it’s violently extracted from the body in Pakistan and Southeast Asia,” Saiyed advised Hyperallergic. The worldwide wig commerce underpays these girls for his or her hair, upcharges the top shopper in a wealthy nation, and greedily pockets the distinction. The kinetic sculpture darkly alludes to how capitalists hold coming again to use the brand new hair development. It additionally performs with the flux of the braid repeatedly reaching its breakpoint and falling.

GMP U2F2ZUdIMDESumaiya Saiyed, “زلفوں کی زنجیر” (Zulfon Ki Zanjeer / Chains of Tresses, 2025), animated gif by creator

Yeabsera Tab’s “still we are water” (2023–25) combines ceramic espresso cups she made by hand and scattered throughout the gallery flooring with a projected video of a efficiency by which she sows chickpea and low hulls whereas talking to kinfolk about rising up in a small neighborhood in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, maybe alluding to the significance of gatherings within the upkeep of a group’s reminiscence. 

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Yeabsera Tabb led a conventional Ethiopian espresso ceremony on April 13, 2025.

In accordance with such concepts, throughout her April 13 occasion on the gallery, Tabb created a “coffee circle” round her set up, pouring the drink and facilitating a dialog within the Ethiopian espresso custom. It’s customary inside this conference to brew bigger portions and invite neighbors and the broader group, with completely different households internet hosting the morning, afternoon, and night espresso hours in rural areas. Tabb affords this shared ritual, which bridges variations between Ethiopia’s multi-ethnic communities and syncopates the rhythm of day by day work with moments of relaxation and connection, as a method to climate the flux.

GMP U2F2ZUdIMDE 1Yeabsera Tabb, “still we are water” (2023–25)

The outdated Ethiopian proverb “The same water never runs into the same river” means that change is as inevitable as it’s pure. This yr feels fairly unnatural up to now, however moral judgments apart, the deeper query is about how we are able to relate to main shifts past our management. As this thought-provoking exhibition suggests, it could be our attitudes towards flux that may make or break our yr.

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Felisa Nguyen, “Something I Can Hold” (2024)IMG 4027

Shangari Mwashighadi, “Untitled” (2025), assemblageIMG 4037

Religion Henderson, “Untitled” (2023)IMG 4031

Spencer Strauss, “The Middle” (2025)IMG 4054

Jinghui Chen, “Celestial Archipelago” (2025)IMG 4051

Sona Lee, “What Dreams May Come” (2025)IMG 4028

Qasim Ali Hussain, “Between Flesh & Spirit: The Nafs Awakens” (2025), video, 22:45 minutesIMG 4034

Teresa Olds, “The Waiting Room” (2025)IMG 4038

Felisa Nguyen, “Promise of an Orchid” (2024)IMG 4048

Danielle Sargeant, element of “Does Water Carry Memory?” (2025)IMG 4052

Felisa Nguyen, “Work for an Axe” (2025)

Re:Turning, the Parsons Advantageous Arts 2025 MFA Thesis Exhibition, continues at Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Gallery on the primary flooring of the Sheila C. Johnson Design Heart at The New College (2 West thirteenth Road, Greenwich Village, Manhattan) via April nineteenth. The exhibition was curated by P! Krishnamurthy.

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