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Hangama Amiri: PARTING/فراق

A textile-based work hangs on a light blue wall, depicting a man in a blue shirt sitting at a table. He clutches a vase of flowers in front of him, half his face obscured behind a stalk.

Works by:

Hangama Amiri

A textile-based work consisting of two panels hangs on a white wall. The smaller, left panel depicts pink flowers against leaves; the right panel shows a woman in a purple skirt, blue top, and black jacket standing in a field with trees behind her and buildings in the distance.
A textile-based work hangs on a white wall, depicting a man in a black sweater and blue jeans sitting cross-legged on a rock in a forest.

Hangama Amiri: PARTING/فراق

Curated by Elizabeth Diggon


Opening Night:

Wednesday, February 25, 6pm–8pm


Exhibition Dates:

February 25–April 11, 2026


Location:

Art Museum at the University of Toronto
Justina M. Barnicke Gallery
(in Hart House)
7 Hart House Circle

Hangama Amiri creates intricately layered textile compositions that muse on kinship, memory, and the meaning of home. PARTING/فراق extends on an ongoing body of work that focuses on the artist’s personal history and diasporic experience. Amiri and her family fled their home in Kabul in 1996, which necessitated a period of familial separation. Her father sought asylum in Denmark and later Norway, while Amiri lived in Tajikistan with her mother and three siblings, before the family settled together in Halifax in 2005. This nine-year separation was marked by the frequent exchange of letters, snapshots, and gifts; missives that outlined the contours of her family’s lives and offered glimpses into jobs, celebrations, or daily acts of care.

In the present, Amiri mines this archive of family photos, material fragments, and memories, translating them into lushly detailed textile collages that focus on her parents. She carefully selects textiles that speak to the specificity of her personal history, acknowledging the ways in which textiles, through their uniquely close relationship to home and the body, become perfumed with meaning and memory over time. Amiri’s focus on textiles also nod to familial bonds—her mother taught her to sew—and to long, diverse histories of feminist textile-based practices. Through PARTING/فراق , Amiri offers viewers access to her memories and diasporic experience: her familial history becomes shared knowledge. Amiri’s work celebrates and witnesses the immense labour required to care for a family amidst migration and separation, and the bonds that connect kin across space and time.

Organized and circulated by Esker Foundation, Calgary.

Exhibition Resources

Press Release

Opening Reception: Winter 2026 Exhibitions

Wednesday, February 25, 6pm–8pm
University of Toronto Art Centre

Our Supporters

We gratefully acknowledge operating support from the Canada Council for the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, and the Toronto Arts Council.