SF Camerawork presents
Nasim Moghadam: And Yet, We See, an exhibition that transforms acts of looking into gestures of resistance. Installed as a series of sculptural and photographic environments, the work confronts the mechanisms through which power controls visibility, particularly in relation to women’s bodies and voices. Moghadam does not treat photography as a fixed image but as a material language—one that can be carried, fragmented, and reassembled to challenge erasure and reclaim agency.
At the heart of the exhibition is a sustained response to the 2022 Iranian protests and the survivors who were blinded by state violence. In Fallen Eyes, images of their eyes are transferred onto magnolia leaves gathered and prepared by hand. As the leaves dry and curl, they retain these gazes, creating an installation that is both fragile and unyielding. Nature becomes a witness, and the collective field of eyes returns the look, reversing the direction of power and refusing disappearance.
Questions of visibility continue in Black Bars, a series of veiled self-portraits in which Moghadam places her own body at stake. Layers of fabric obscure her face, not as an act of concealment imposed from outside, but as a choice that asserts control over what can and cannot be seen. The veil functions as a surface of transformation, complicating assumptions about exposure, legibility, and identity. Looking here becomes an ethical encounter rather than a consumptive act.
In Noose, Moghadam confronts the physical and psychological threat of oppression through a fabric-based installation incorporating women’s hair and black textiles. What might read as a symbol of violence is reconfigured into a space of mourning, solidarity, and vigilance. Grief is acknowledged without surrender, and vulnerability is held alongside resilience.
Throughout
And Yet, We See, Moghadam dismantles the imperial gaze by insisting that vision is reciprocal. Her works occupy the space between refuge and exposure, echoing strategies of survival shaped under surveillance. In returning the gaze, the exhibition affirms that to see—and to insist on being seen—is an enduring act of courage.
Image:
© Nasim Moghadam