Sheida Soleimani: Forest of Stars, presented at Yancey Richardson from April 16 through May 22, 2026, unfolds as a layered exploration of exile, memory, and care. In this first exhibition with the gallery, the Iranian-American artist extends her ongoing
Ghostwriter series, drawing from her parents’ histories as political dissidents forced to flee Iran after the 1979 revolution. What emerges is not a straightforward narrative, but a carefully constructed visual language where personal history intersects with broader geopolitical realities.
Soleimani’s photographs resist conventional documentary approaches. Instead, she stages intricate tableaux in the studio, assembling archival materials, symbolic objects, and living subjects into dense, surreal compositions. These images operate as acts of reconstruction, piecing together fragments of memory without claiming direct testimony. Her parents’ experiences are evoked through gesture and metaphor, suggesting the emotional residue of displacement rather than its literal chronology.
A notable evolution within the exhibition appears in the
Flyways works, which draw on Soleimani’s parallel practice as a licensed wildlife rehabilitator. Close-up images of birds—feathers, talons, and eyes rendered in striking detail—introduce a new dimension to her visual vocabulary. These animals, often rescued and cared for by the artist, become powerful symbols of migration and vulnerability. Their journeys mirror those of human displacement, shaped by forces both natural and imposed.
The presence of Soleimani’s mother extends beyond subject matter into the exhibition space itself, with a site-specific wall drawing that underscores the intergenerational transmission of care. This gesture anchors the work in lived experience, reinforcing the idea that acts of tending—to bodies, to memories, to fragile ecosystems—carry political weight. Care, in this context, becomes both an ethic and a form of resistance.
Visually rich and conceptually layered,
Forest of Stars situates storytelling within a framework of survival. Soleimani’s images blur the boundaries between fact and fiction, intimacy and history, offering a perspective in which personal narratives illuminate larger systems of power, while quietly insisting on the enduring force of compassion.
Image:
Sheida Soleimani, Deliverance, 2024. Archival pigment print, 70 x 90 inches. © Sheida Soleimani, courtesy of the Yancey Richardson Gallery