top of page
Siena Hancock
Since graduating from Massachusetts College of Art with her BFA in 2016, Siena Hancock has developed an interdisciplinary practice employing sculpture and installation, seeking to interact with communities, through ethnographic methods, in order to explore cultural phenomena. Currently an Emerging Artist Fellow at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Hancock is pursuing research related to the relationship between the female nude and body language within the context of the museum’s extensive collection and in contemporary media. Her recent work deals with cyberfeminism, alternative realities, mythology, and how technology affects social customs.
 
For more information about the artist, please visit: sienajhancock.com
Artwork Featured: 
*5_Hancock_Mirror Mask.jpeg
Mirror Mask
Snapseed.jpg
Felt Cute Today, Might Delete Later
Hancock employs conceptual and craft processes to explore how womxn’s experiences are constructed. In Mirror Mask, the wearer cannot see out of the mask while the viewer is struck by a multiplicity of their own reflection. 
Hancock’s self portrait Felt Cute Today, Might Delete Later criticizes selfie culture. Hancock pushes to integrate different perspectives in her work. She also strives to produce work built upon her own research and observations on how humans process information and conveys these findings through traditional forms of art.
bottom of page