October 9 – December 15, 2024
Reception – Thursday, October 24th 5 – 7pm
The Griffin @ Lafayette City Center Passageway is located at 2 Ave de Lafayette in Downtown Crossing, Boston. The passageway connects Macy’s, the Lafayette Tower offices and the Hyatt Regency, Boston.
We are pleased to welcome the MFA students at Boston University’s department of Print Media & Photography to the Griffin’s satellite gallery at Lafayette City Center Passageway.
Dialogue presents work by Boston University’s Print Media and Photography MFA class of 2025. In this exhibition, each artist expresses their own artistic voice through an interdisciplinary approach that illuminates the nature of this unique MFA program.
Working in darkrooms, printmaking studios and beyond, the artists employ traditional and experimental techniques that oscillate between a variety of mediums to create a range of thematic dialogues.
Collectively, they explore issues of chance, feminism, identity, society, and politics. As you navigate the exhibition, we invite you to engage in these thematic dialogues, questioning and responding to the narratives contained within this body of work.
About the Artists
Shannon Johnson
Shannon Johnson is a visual artist, working in printmaking, photography, painting, installation, and found domestic objects, from Springfield, Massachusetts. Growing up in Springfield, an incredibly diverse city, as a young white woman exposed her to the complex latticework of American Injustice. Her work covers broad subjects with consistent threads, examining mental illness, trauma, and feminist issues with regard to violence against women. Shannon graduated from Smith College in 2015 with a Bachelor of Art in Studio Art, having focused on painting and photography. For the next eight years, she worked as a visual arts teacher in Springfield with children of all ages. Currently, she is a candidate in the MFA Print Media and Photography program at Boston University.
I see connections everywhere and identify as a radical feminist in that I am constantly examining life through an understanding of structural patriarchy. It is through this radical feminist lens that I explore issues of feminism, bodily autonomy, social justice, intimacy, trauma, mental illness, and especially sexual violence. Using photography, printmaking, bookmaking, installation, and painting, I seek to explore and understand the relationships between the images, objects, and interpretations of the roles and values of women and our bodies. I collect a variety of materials including books, clothing, linens, and household objects as the foundation for many of these works: turning utilitarian, functional objects into works of art, now made neither functional nor utilitarian.
Text, images, and meanings are revealed and obscured through layers of ink, pastel, and paper, coalescing color, shapes, bodies, and subject matter, holes carefully cut through pages to piece together this web of patriarchy. By creating large impressions, I aim to place the viewer in an intimate space, removing the mask and closing the gap between the private and the public. I use self-portraiture and found images including didactic photography to reveal contradictions and, often unrealistic, expectations of the boxes we have been forced into. Through these different modalities, I aim to create an understanding and urgency regarding the intimate, emotional issue of women’s autonomy and freedom. The driving core of my work is the rallying cry of early feminist movements of the 1960s and 1970s, “the personal is political.” I aim for my work to be confrontational, to incite urgency in the viewer. The goal of my work isn’t to soothe or please the viewer, but to create an intense reaction. My work is explicit, and its rawness and obscenity are essential to convey the urgency of my rage and my abiding need for freedom.
Jason Parent
Born in New Jersey, raised in Upstate New York, and now based in Boston, Massachusetts, Jason Parent is a visual artist and MFA Print Media & Photography candidate at Boston University. With an interdisciplinary skill set, Jason explores the concept of identity.
The hidden and forgotten,
swept under the rug,
buried six feet deep —
A devotion to the exposure of life’s cover-ups inspires my work. Through my interdisciplinary practice, I explore themes of identity, memory, and emotion. Grounded in the excavation of my own existence, my interests expand to issues of gender, sexuality, and the human condition.
Jerry Rodríguez Sosa
Jerry Rodríguez Sosa is an interdisciplinary artist from Brownsville, Texas and Monterrey, México. After earning a BA in English and Creative Writing from the University of Texas at Austin, he worked in data analytics for multiple languages at Apple, followed by an internship in letterpress printmaking at Hatch Show Print in Nashville, Tennessee. Subsequently, he moved to Boston, Massachusetts to pursue his MFA in Print Media and Photography at Boston University.
My art is influenced by my heritage and identity. I primarily work with printmaking, photography, and drawing to explore how these intersections can help me craft personal and cultural narratives. My visual language incorporates bodies, symbolisms, text, photo archives, and geographical landscapes to examine and heal the internalities of my Mexican American, queer experience.
Susan Swirsley
Susan is a visual artist who has traveled extensively throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia. Her diverse travel experiences and background in business and the social sciences offer a rich foundation for her work. The amalgamation of photography with other artistic disciplines, cultures and places opens up fascinating possibilities in her practice.
Currently based in Boston, she is a 2025 MFA candidate in the Print Media and Photography program at Boston University.
I am a photo-based artist who uses historical and contemporary processes to translate digital, film, and camera-less images onto paper, fabric, acrylic, and other surfaces. Resourcefulness, experimentation, and the use of “abandoned” materials such as expired paper and botanical remnants are integral to my practice. I create physical objects, large and small, including handmade books.
My work is focused on the unpredictable intersection of abstract and representational images, weaving them together to create a new reality. I examine and question how photographic images function, what they represent and what we expect of them. Process, materiality, illusion, and the juncture of chance an preservation in photographic images play an important role in my artistic practice. I embrace the principle of chance by using materials (photographic paper and chemicals) in different ways than they are normally intended. This experimentation and element of surprise drives my work and extends to combining photographs with printmaking and painting processes and materials.
Tung Lin Tsai
Tung is a practitioner of everyday life who focuses on the relationship between mundanity and photography. As a photographer, he often incorporates everyday objects into his work. Items such as paper airplanes, plastic bags, office paper, and daily calendars are metaphorically placed in his pieces as political symbols. For Tung, these objects represent not only political language but also the reality of everyday life as a Taiwanese citizen — a citizen of a non-sovereign state. Tung is currently an MFA Photography and Print Media candidate at Boston University, navigating this complex world.
From analog to digital processes, from staged to candid images, I capture the mundane — like flying paper and plastic bags. When my strobes fire, they freeze a split second of reality. A strobe flashes for 1/500 to 1/25,000 of a second, capturing what human eyes can’t perceive. Yet, no matter how fast my strobes are, I can’t freeze this moment of peace. The lightness of everyday life is the true weight of Sisyphus’s rock, eternally rolled uphill. My work, therefore, carries the unbearable lightness of a piece of paper.