Salam.
Prita Tina Yeganeh is a multidisciplinary visual artist of Iranian ancestry. Her practice is shaped by her lived experiences of forced displacement, her education in environmental engineering, and experimental research into Iranian heritage crafts. Yeganeh works between textile, installation, printmaking and moving image.
Through slow, durational and community engaged processes, Yeganeh draws on Iranian sensibilities and Indigenous knowledge systems to explore the emotional and physical geographies of migration, health and identity —examining how reconnection, care, and healing can be metabolised and enacted across distance in both personal, familial and communal life.
Alongside exhibitions, Yeganeh’s expanded practice includes community-led projects that centre co-authorship, solidarity, and cultural care. She collaborates with the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (ASRC) and World Craft Council-Australia, and co-founded Magan-djin Creatives for Palestine in 2024. She has spoken on forced migration, home, and the social value of craft at RMIT School of Art, IOTA-2024, and the Brisbane Multicultural Arts Centre’s Creative Confluence program. She also co-founded Magan-djin Creatives for Palestine, supporting projects such as The First Gathering, which mobilised 200 local artists to raise awareness and financial support.