Sheree Hovsepian’s work at MoMA constructs bodies from fragments, assembling photographs of body parts into three-dimensional compositions that resist becoming unified figures. The artist, born in Iran and raised in the United States, describes growing up with a hyper-awareness of her body as a politically charged location, an experience that continues to shape how she depicts the human form. In this exhibition, she uses her sister as a stand-in, photographing isolated limbs and spines before combining gelatin silver prints with ceramics, nylon hosiery, string and wood.
The resulting works appear assemblage-like and provisional. In
Awoken from 2018, stretched hosiery creates an opening across the surface that partially veils the figure beneath.
Stranger on Display from 2024 features stacked walnut semicircles below a photographed back, echoing the vertebrae of a spine. In
Rapport, also from 2024, an arm reaches outward from a ceramic torso. Across these pieces, bodies exist in parts rather than as complete wholes, deliberately unsettled and assembled through additive processes that treat photography as a starting point rather than an endpoint.
Hovsepian approaches her materials as agents in their own right. She works with string, nylon and ceramic forms that carry symbolism around femininity, women's labor and time. The hand-cut ceramic pieces vary even when the same form is repeated, emphasizing that each piece is unique despite drawing from a photographic archive built over years. She photographs her sister using medium-format film and natural daylight, following a strict ritual that isolates objects and bodies against black felt backgrounds.
The exhibition, titled
Hyundai Card First Look: Sheree Hovsepian, runs from April 24 through Fall 2026 on Floor 2 at MoMA. It presents
Awoken,
Rapport and
Stranger on Display alongside studio documentation that reveals how the artist builds bodies through touch, layering and play, moving from the photograph toward the object.
Image:
Sheree Hovsepian. Rapport. 2024. Gelatin silver prints, ceramic, string, nails, velvet, walnut frame, 21 1/2 × 19 1/2 × 3 1/2" (54.6 × 49.5 × 8.9 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Carol and David Appel Family Fund. © 2026 Sheree Hovsepian