Iranian born, New York based artist Bahar Behbahani talks about the layers of poetry and politics she discovered while researching the legendary Persian garden. Her solo exhibition at the Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College reveals how the idyllic refuge became entangled with American espionage and a 1953 political coup in Iran. Highly relevant considering the mounting intensity of today's global tensions, the hidden agendas and coded behaviors exposed in Bahar Behbahani's work might well be the blueprint for a new political barrier erected this week: the executive order of a restrictive, anti-Muslim United States immigration policy.
Sound Editor: Guney Ozsan | Sound Effects: Bahar Behbahani, Visiting you in summer, 2015
When Artists Who Teach Make Art
Creating Community in Kazakhstan—with CEC ArtsLink
Poetic Interventions Point to Pollution in Kyrgyzstan
Listening to St. Louis—Counterpublic Art Triennial 2023
Searching for Libertalia—with Shiraz Bayjoo
Sharjah Biennial 15—with Hoor Al Qasimi
Global Appalachia—Where Culture and Geography Shape Community
Lure of Local Arts in Appalachia
Curators Declare Independence at IKT Kentucky
A Persian Garden in Manhattan—with Bahar Behbahani
The State of Blackness—with Andrea Fatona
Public Water—with Mary Mattingly
I Wish to Say—with Sheryl Oring
Aesthetics of Excess—with Jillian Hernandez
Art in Miami, Then and Now—with FeCuOp
Diaspora Art from the Creole City—with Rosie Gordon-Wallace
Puerto Rico Rising—Resisting Paradise
Puerto Rico Rising—Resilient Artists
Puerto Rico Rising—Radical Leaders
The Awakening
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Spider-Man Crawlspace Podcast
Harlem Is Everywhere
Art2Life
Just So Stories
Gulliver’s Travels
The Art Angle
The Week in Art