Melody Melamed: Shangri-la opens as a space of affirmation, where portraiture becomes a site of presence rather than performance. Presented from February 1st to August 31st, 2026, the exhibition gathers works from Melamed’s ongoing project
The Book of Skin, inviting viewers into a visual landscape shaped by intimacy, embodiment, and self-recognition. Rooted in her experience as a Brooklyn-based Iranian-American artist, Melamed’s images move between stillness and intensity, offering a quiet yet insistent meditation on what it means to be seen. Each portrait resists spectacle, instead holding space for the subject to exist fully, without translation or apology.
At the core of the exhibition lies the notion of “gender euphoria,” approached not as abstraction but as lived reality. Melamed traces this feeling through gestures, textures, and the subtle interplay of light across skin. Her painterly sensibility, influenced by classical traditions yet grounded in contemporary urgency, shapes images that feel both timeless and immediate. Shadows conceal as much as they reveal, allowing identities to emerge gradually, never fixed or reduced. The body appears not as an object to decode but as a terrain of knowledge, carrying histories of transformation, resilience, and desire.
Melamed’s long-term engagement with trans and queer communities informs the ethical dimension of her work. Collaboration replaces observation, and the camera becomes a tool of connection rather than distance. In many compositions, the human form is placed alongside elements of the natural world, suggesting an intrinsic relationship between body and environment. Through diptychs and layered imagery, she draws parallels between organic growth and personal becoming, emphasizing continuity rather than separation. The resulting photographs propose a visual language where identity aligns with nature’s own complexity and fluidity.
Shangri-la unfolds as both a personal inquiry and a shared sanctuary. It reflects Melamed’s evolving understanding of herself alongside those she photographs, creating a collective portrait grounded in trust and vulnerability. Within this space, affirmation does not arrive as declaration but as atmosphere, something felt in the quiet intensity of each frame. The exhibition holds a simple yet profound proposition: that visibility, when shaped with care, carries the power to transform not only how bodies are seen, but how they are lived.
Image:
© Melody Melamed, 2021