Kniznick Gallery
The Kniznick Gallery is committed to feminist exhibitions of artistic excellence that reflect the activities of the Women's Studies Research Center Scholars and engage communities within and beyond Brandeis University.

Photo Credit: Wrong & RIGHTS Installation View, Dawn Williams Boyd, Bev Grant, Frank Selby, Guerilla Girls, Hannah Wilke, Scott Hunt, Judy Chicago, Wrongs & RIGHTS, 2024-2025, Curated by Laura Dvorkin and Maynard Monrow, Kniznick Gallery, Women's Studies Research Center, Photo by Sasha Pedro.
The art on display is a vehicle through which the center seeks to promote dialogue about important issues and address the ever-changing challenges related to women and gender.
Current Exhibition
Hannah Altman | As It Were, Suspended in Midair
February 13 - June 12, 2025
Presented by the Hadassah-Brandeis Institute
Hannah Altman, HIding (Flying), 2023, Archival pigment print, 20 x 25 inches, Courtesy of the artist
In As It Were, Suspended in Midair, Hannah Altman’s photographs examine how Jewish myths are shared, inherited, and reshaped across the diaspora. Altman draws from Yiddish literature and Jewish mystical texts as she situates her female protagonists in lush landscapes and fraught interiors. Animated by sunlight, their postures, gestures, environments, and ritual objects foreshadow abundance and danger. Their mere presence threatens dominant narratives grounded in patriarchal tradition.
Still lifes interject like incantations, offering suspense and new possibilities: a corner knee-deep in salt, a hand mirror submerged in a jar, an open-palmed Baba Yaga puppet – a witch from Slavic folklore who feasted on children. Altman juxtaposes a person’s back with five thick nails puncturing their white garment and a stretched klaf – parchment paper produced from a tanned and kosherized animal inscribed with biblical passages to fit inside a mezuzah. Layering symbols and allusions, Altman builds a world that recasts and transforms Jewish ritual and folklore toward the world ahead.
THE TICKET Things to do around Boston this weekend and beyond, February 12, 2025, Boston Globe
"As It Were, Suspended In Midair emerges as a dynamic, speculative reworking of tradition, resonating across generations and landscapes". —Kaitlyn Ovett Clark, January 2025, Boston Art Review
HANNAH ALTMAN is a Jewish-American artist from New Jersey and based in Boston. She holds an MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University. Her photographs portray lineage, folklore, memory, and narrative.
Her work has been exhibited at Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art, Silver Eye Center for Photography, Ogden Museum of Southern Art, Filter Photo, Technical Collections Dresden Museum, Blue Sky Gallery, Candela Gallery, and the Griffin Museum of Photography, among others. Publications where her work has appeared includes the New York Times, Artforum, Vanity Fair, PHMuseum, Carnegie Museum of Art Storyboard, Lensculture, Booooooom, and British Journal of Photography. She was included in the 2021 Silver List, a 2022 Hopper Prize finalist, the 2022 Portraits Hellerau Photography Award First Prize Winner, a 2023 Innovate Grant Recipient, and a 2023 Aperture Portfolio Prize Finalist. She became the inaugural Blanksteen Artist in Residence at the Slifka Center for Jewish Life at Yale in 2022.
Her first photobook Kavana (2020, Kris Graves Projects) is housed in permanent collections including the MoMa Library and the Metropolitan Museum of Art Thomas J Watson Library. Her new monograph, We Will Return to You (2025) is published by Saint Lucy Books.
Gallery hours: Monday-Thursday, 10 am - 4 pm