Catalog - Ilex Foundation
Transcription
Catalog - Ilex Foundation
ersian Vision Persian Visions C o n t e m p o r a r y P h o t o g r a p h y Hamid Severi f r o m I r a n Gary Hallman Essay by Robert Silberman Persian Persian Visions C o n t e m p o r a r y Hamid Severi P h o t o g r a p h y f r o m I r a n Gary Hallman Contents Published by International Arts & Artists (IA&A), 2005 www.artsandartists.org International Arts & Artists 9 Hillyer Court NW Washington, DC 20008 USA Catalogue designed by Nynke de Haan and Andrea Yeo for IA&A’s Design Studio, and edited by Penny Kiser, editorial manager at IA&A Persian Visions was developed by Hamid Severi for the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, Iran, and Gary Hallman of the Regis Center for Art, University of Minnesota and toured by International Arts & Artists, Washington, D.C. This exhibition was made possible in part by the ILEX Foundation, University of Minnesota McKnight Arts and Humanities Endowment, and the Department of Art, Regis Center for Art, University of Minnesota. Printed and bound by Craft Print, Singapore Exhibition Venues: ISBN 0-9662859-8-0 • Nicolaysen Art Museum, Casper, WY October 2005 — January 2006 © 2005 International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC No part of this catalogue may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means without permission from International Arts & Artists. All images in this catalogue are courtesy of the artists • Honolulu Academy of Art, HI January 2006 — April 2006 • University of Arizona Museum of Art, Tucson, AZ August 2006 — October 2006 (right) Ahmad Nateghi, Untitled (page 56) • Chicago Cultural Center, IL November 2006 — December 2006 Frontispiece: Mohammad Farnood, Myth of War (page 40) • Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY January 2007 — March 2007 Front cover: Koroush Admin, Revelations (page 64) • Art Gallery of the University of Maryland, College Park, MD April 2007 — May 2007 Inside back cover: Shahrokh Ja’fari, Child’s View 1 (page 34) • University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor, MI October 2007 — January 2008 For an updated schedule of venues: www.artsandartists.org exhpages/persian.html. Introduction 8 David Furchgott Persian Visions 10 Robert Silberman Exhibition Checklist 66 Introduction Neither an Axis of Evil nor a Great Satan Increasing cross-cultural understanding through the arts is a core mission of International Arts & Artists and a cause dear to my heart. It would be hard to imagine a greater opportunity to achieve this than the U.S. tour of Persian Visions: Contemporary Photographs from Iran. Persian Visions was arranged in spite of the current U.S. government sanction against “official” cultural exchange with Iran. When I visited Iran recently I learned of the project from Dr. Ali Reza Sami Azar, director of the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art. Dr. Sami Azar first conceived this concept with Gary Hallman, photographer and University of Minnesota professor. Enlisting the assistance of Hamid Severi to serve as independent curator for the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, joined Gary Hallman to bring these extraordinary and diverse photographers in an exhibition to the U.S. Persian Visions is the result of their ability to put together a people-to-people endeavor that overcame daunting obstacles. I was in Iran at the time as an “unofficial” judge on the first foreign jury for the National Painting Biennial. I believe I was “unofficial” because of some trepidation on their part about inviting an American to be part of this event. Although my wife is Persian and I have some familiarity with the culture, I had some concerns of my own—which thankfully proved unfounded. It turns out our street-level view of Iran is as equally distorted as their official view of us. When I arrived in Iran I was elevated to “official” status. Later my European and East Asian jury colleagues asked me to be the spokesperson. The opening ceremony was attended by hundreds of young Iranian artists. My name was announced, followed by an introduction in Farsi, which I did not understand, followed by uproarious laughter. I was later told that Dr. Sami Azar had joked, “Here to speak for the foreign jurors is David Furchgott, a special guest from a country whose name we cannot mention as we don’t want the museum to lose its government funding.” Before I went to Iran, someone suggested that if I was asked I should tell people I was Canadian. I decided to stick with the truth. As an American I was welcomed, and often told, “We love Americans.” I did not see evidence of the so-called “axis of evil.” It certainly was not on the streets of Tehran, or in the art museum, or among the artists. And, I certainly never felt that Iranians thought of me as a representative of the “Great Satan.” I feel there is a lesson to be learned here through art, that we must suspend preconceived beliefs, or at least suspend disbelief, to truly understand those we might misjudge as our adversaries. In my ten days viewing art, what struck me the most was the youth and energy of the Iranian artists and their interest in simultaneously pushing boundaries and finding something of their own roots in their work. This is equally true among the photographers in Persian Visions. The photographs in this exhibition hint at a story—sometimes to an extreme. While these are photographs, often luscious with color and imagery, they are also narratives and provide cultural clues about our sameness and our differences. Art is a great mediator of differences. Understanding cultural origins and differences lessens our fears, and develops appreciation and tolerance. Hopefully this exhibition will lead you, the viewer, to open a door within yourself. Our sincere thanks to Robert Silberman, associate professor, Department of Art History, University of Minnesota. His essay for this catalogue guides us through the exhibition with great insight and sensitivity. International Arts & Artists is grateful to the ILEX Foundation; the University of Minnesota McKnight Arts and Humanities Endowment; and the Department of Art, the Regis Center for Art, University of Minnesota for their support of Persian Visions. IA&A is also thankful for the enthusiastic U.S. response to this exhibition. The exhibition will travel to the Nicolaysen Art Museum, Casper, Wyoming; the Honolulu Academy of Arts, Hawaii; University of Arizona Museum of Art, Tucson; the Chicago Cultural Center, Illinois; the Art Gallery of the University of Maryland, College Park; the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York; and the University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor. At International Arts & Artists, we thank Marlene Rothacker, senior exhibitions manager, as well as Hunter Hollins, Sarah E. Gilmore, Nynke de Haan, Jennifer Gerow, Kyusun Shim, Tatjana Franke, Ivan Djordjevic, Andrea Parker, Heather Townsend and our entire dedicated staff. For the Benefit of All, David Furchgott, President International Arts & Artists, August 2005 Persian Visions In the photographic community in Europe and the United States, the best-known pictures of Iran are probably those in the 1983 book Telex Iran: In the Name of Revolution by the photojournalist Gilles Peress. The photographs were made in 1979-80 in the wake of the Iranian revolution that forced the Shah into exile and brought Ayatollah Khomeini to power. At the time, Americans caught up in the seizure of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran were still being held hostage. The Peress images display great immediacy, intensity, and graphic strength. They are accompanied by Telex messages exchanged with the photographer’s photo-agency, Magnum, which reinforce the sense of disconnection and confusion and make clear how difficult it was to get the photographs published. A note by the photographer facing the title page states, “These photographs…do not represent a complete picture of Iran or a final record of that time.” An epigraph from Roland Barthes establishes an ironic attitude toward those “young photojournalists at work around the world determined upon the capture of actuality,” while one from Jorge Luis Borges serves as a reminder of the Islamic proscription on representation of living creatures. The disclaimer by Peress and a statement by “The Editors” indicate a determination to make clear that capturing actuality is not really possible, given the stereotypes about the Middle East in general and contemporary Iran in particular, and the fact that Peress, a Frenchman, is an outsider. All the same, the photograph placed at the end of the introductory statement shows a hand-painted sign that says, “As an Iranian I want you corresponders + journalists + film-takers [to] tell the truth to the world.” More than two decades later, the 20 photographers in Persian Visions offer the view from the other side. They are insiders—Iranians. For them it is the West that is on the other side; otherness, after all, is a matter of perspective. Their 10 goal is not to document contemporary Iran for the non-Iranian world, dispelling the sense of exoticism and foreignness that permeates Western coverage of Iran and the Middle East. Persian Visions is not “A Day in the Life of Iran,” an attempt at a systematic portrait of a country. It is a gathering of more personal efforts, with the view of contemporary Iran filtered through private, individual sensibilities even when addressing shared public concerns. In expressing their many different visions of their world, the contributors do offer a look at both private and public realms. Yet their pictures do not provide a neat guide—“Mysteries of the Orient Revealed.” They do something better. They demonstrate how rich and varied are the possibilities of photography as a medium of expression, and how fully those possibilities are being explored in contemporary Iran. These images are not the result of a coordinated group effort or a shared group style. What they have in common, above all, is artistry. Photography is in a period of change as 11 old methods are giving way to new techniques and the digital revolution takes hold. But Persian Visions demonstrates that photography is alive and well—and how!—in Iran. Much remains allusive and elusive in these works, at least for this outsider-viewer. But one thing is clear: the quality of the work. According to curator Hamid Severi, in the immediate wake of the Revolution and during Iran’s war with Iraq (1980-88), photography in Iran was largely public, photojournalistic, even propagandistic. In the period since, there has been a turn toward private and aesthetic concerns, driven in part by new support for the use of photography as an artistic medium in the universities, and by a network of galleries, publications, and friendships within the photographic community and the broader art and media worlds. There are still proscriptions however: no nudity can be shown and no sensitive issues, especially political questions concerning the regime, can be addressed. One of the most striking aspects of the work in Persian Visions is that these photographers are obviously not isolated from the world of contemporary photography and art. On the contrary, it is obvious just how connected they are. Their works display a state-of-the-art technical (and technological) skill, with some revealing a mastery of digital manipulation of camera images and of digital printing even as others use traditional film and darkroom techniques. Also apparent, accompanying this technical sophistication, is formal and conceptual refinement, so that there are many similarities to the kind of work one would see in New York, Paris, London…or Minneapolis, where the exhibition first appeared. To take but one example: Sadegh Tirafkan presents photographic images as elements in a work that also includes moving pictures on monitors. That is a sign of how international trends, in this case the use of mixed-media installations, can sweep through the contemporary art world, and how plugged-in Iranian artists are to global developments. Yet that impression of internationalism in some elements of style is offset by the even stronger sense of how deeply these photographs are rooted in Iranian culture, with powerful preoccupations or nuanced inflections that arise from the specific characteristics of the country, its past as well as its present. Identity, that unlimited yet essential subject, is Sadegh Tirafkan, Persepolis (59) 12 13 Majid Koorang Beheshti, Untitled (29) 14 Majid Koorang Beheshti, Untitled (32) Majid Koorang Beheshti, Untitled (31) 15 central to much of the work, as is indicated by the centrality of portraiture, whether in the triptych by Majid Koorang Beheshti, showing his profile illuminated in three different positions, looking up, looking down, and with a shadowy figure in the background—a vision of identity at once epic and uncertain—or in the exquisite, haunting studies by Arman Stepanian of the photographs on gravestones. Arman Stepanian, Untitled (37) The pleasure to be found in the beauty of the prints and the subtle treatment of surfaces, textures, and patterns of light and shadow is another notable aspect of Persian Visions. This devotion to beauty is worthy of the early 20th-century Pictorialists, photographers such as those in the circle around Alfred Stieglitz who were determined to prove the artistic status of photography. It also no doubt recalls the extraordinary love of surface pattern and color to be found in traditional Persian art and design. The sheer loveliness of Ebrahim Khadem Bayat’s pictures is a reminder of the ability of photography to make subjects into objects of mystery and fascination, in a shrouded female figure or the delicate play on presence and absence created by nothing more than a filmy, ethereal garment draped on a chair. With their seductive softness, Farshid Mesghali’s images draw us into a world (Right) Arman Stepanian, Untitled (38) Arman Stepanian, Untitled (40) 18 (Right) Arman Stepanian, Untitled where time is frozen and we can share in the dreamy contemplation of fish in the aquarium or the pleasures of observing life pass by those sitting on a bench beside a street. Saeed Sadeghi’s group of photographs titled Their Hands Are In Pain moves from a more journalistic image, with a woman behind a metal filigree shown holding up a snapshot of a man, to the more purely aesthetic, as in the image of hands standing out against the dark chador of a woman whose face is not shown, or a lyric study of a figure silhouetted against the sky. In the forceful, expressionistic geometry of Majid Koorang Beheshti’s photographs aesthetic concerns are also central, although in a different key. Beheshti is a painter, and his photographs use black forms as an architectural foundation, with the strength of a good abstract painting notwithstanding the presence of a woman in one image. These works hover between abstraction and representation: one that is dark to the point of befuddlement includes what I took to be a roughly-hewn head but turned out to be--mea culpa--a garbage bag. The pure visual appeal of many of the works is shadowed by the signs in Persian Visions of how challenging it can be to make images in Iran today. In Islamic societies the act of making representations can be Ebrahim Khadem Bayat, Untitled (26) (Opposite) Ebrahim Khadem Bayat, Untitled (27) controversial, even dangerous. In contemporary Iran there is relative freedom of artistic expression. Nevertheless, one way that the common culture does appear in Persian Visions is in the preoccupation with representation, and the issue of what can and cannot be shown. The work of Shokoufeh Alidousti presents the artist veiled, seen largely as the intense black form of her chador with only a bit of her face showing in a corner (with lipstick, and therefore modern). But the family snapshots she holds are exposed to view and include images of her in less formal, less partial views. The series Image of Imagination by Bahman Jalali presents people in an appealing variety of conventional studio portraits from early in the 20th century. These images are sandwiched between fragments of the words from a sign for a photography studio and what might appear in the West to be the bold gestural strokes Ebrahim Khadem Bayat, Untitled (25) 22 (Right) Farshid Mesghali, Untitled (Girl & Fishes) (50) Saeed Sadeghi, Their Hands Are In Pain (12) Saeed Sadeghi, Their Hands Are In Pain (15) of Abstract Expressionism—but are in fact the defacing marks of cultural hardliners indicating their condemnation of photographic portraiture as inappropriate. In turn, Generous Butcher, one of several works by Esmail Abbasi that juxtapose two images, presents an antique-colored illustration of the healing of a butcher by a saint, Imam Ali. In this familiar tale the butcher sells tainted meat to a lady who complains to the Imam, and when the butcher realizes with whom he is dealing, he breaks his arm, only to have it restored by the holy man. Combining the old-fashioned image illustrating this tale with a photograph of a broken pencil in effect establishes a metaphorical parallel to the present and poses a question: where is the person or group or force capable of restoring freedom of expression? Another pair of images, Tantalus, juxtaposes a woman in chains with a flock of birds, an unmistakable allegory of restraint and freedom. Saeed Sadeghi, Their Hands Are In Pain (14) As in other countries where freedom of expression is at issue, artists in Iran often use guarded strategies that protect against repression and censorship by avoiding any overt, easily identifiable statement. Such works display an awareness that in a place and time where upheaval and danger appear the basic state of affairs there may be no such thing as the pursuit of beauty for its own sake. Beauty might appear a self-indulgent luxury or a deliberate statement of disengagement. Yet it may also provide a disguise—not Saeed Sadeghi, Their Hands Are In Pain (16) 25 Shokoufeh Alidousti, Self-Portrait 1 (21) a sugar-coating—that conceals a meaning or message. Whether because of the political situation, especially as it affects the politics of representation, or because of a personal or cultural love of allegory and hermetic expression, many contemporary Iranian artists have turned to an art of indirection and mystery. The imposing but enigmatic untitled image by Leila Pazooki is the most dramatic example of this tendency in Persian Visions, a tableau with elements that appear undeniably symbolic yet remain all but undecipherable. What might be the meaning of the glass urn with water, the skull, the shrouded figures, the heavy-metal T-shirt emblazoned with a scythe and “Death” in Gothic letters, the verbal fragment “[sy]mbolic” peeking out from behind the water-filled urn? There is also the antique fan, a neat curio—but what does it mean? Inspiration, in the manner of Jean Cocteau, the French avant-gardist who had Orpheus gaining poetic inspiration through obscure messages sent via a car radio? Or is a fan sometimes only a fan, a decorative element? I suspect even Iranians would be challenged by this symbolism. As an outsider to Iranian art and society—I have never been to Iran—I find the image a provocative puzzle. Shokoufeh Alidousti, Self-Portrait 3 (23) The exhibition presents surprisingly few conventional landscape images, but in the juxtaposed ancient monuments and modern buildings in Shahrokh Ja’fari’s series, Child’s View, as well as in Tirafkan’s Shokoufeh Alidousti, Self-Portrait 4 (24) Shokoufeh Alidousti, Self-Portrait 2 (22) 27 Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 5 (43e) Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 1 (43a) Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 3 (43c) Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 4 (43d) images from Persepolis—the embodiment of ancient Persia—it is possible to see landscapes present and past and become aware of the unavoidable importance of history in Iran. Many images in Persian Visions are haunted by the ancient past and its role as a backdrop for the present, and by a sense that contemporary issues of national identity and the role of Iran in the world remain bound up with the culture’s historical heritage. The dialectic between past and present is most apparent in the work of Tirafkan, where the ruins of the ancient capital are a reminder of past grandeur but also a sign of the present, as a tourist site that becomes a theatrical stage for the play of identity. There are also reminders of a less distant past in images from the Iran-Iraq War, when photojournalism of a particular kind—”committed art”—was all. Mohammad Farnood’s images recall that period by displaying a commitment to the “epic of war” in a heroic portrait of special troops, and in the image of a memorial to a dead soldier and the hard vision of Survival. Yet there is also the poetic Daily Life, of a street musician amid falling snow. The photographs of the late Kaveh Golestan, a preeminent photojournalist in Iran and a tragic casualty of 28 Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 2 (43b) the 2003 U.S. led war in Iraq, display an expressionistic wash that both heightens and softens the shock effect caused by seeing the disasters of war, dead babies and mourning relatives. These images are not heroic but tragic. The use of historical imagery, beyond suggesting nostalgia, a melancholy sense of loss, or an ironic standard against which to measure the present state of the world, also allows a displacement into a realm free of some contemporary restrictions. History, for example, can provide pictures of women that could otherwise not be shown. Esmail Abbasi, Generous Butcher (42a) Leila Pazooki, Untitled (41) A sense of history also appears in the play between media. Another double image by Esmail Abbasi, titled Rumi, has one part that shows a silhouette of a photographer against a blurred, spinning image on top of which are calligraphic marks. This might be interpreted in several ways: as an image of the effort of the still photographer to capture the rapid movement of life, and in particular the inexpressible, mystical exuberance and self-abnegation of Sufism (“Die, die, before you die”); as an indication that the photographer must somehow enter into that energetic flow; or as a sign of the relationship between two major ways of describing experience, calligraphy (and writing) and photography (and image-making). That play between the hand and the machine, old and new forms of communication, takes another turn in the play between photography and television that also appears in Persian Visions. Several of the artists incorporate the image of television screens into their images, as if to acknowledge the dominant role of television in supplying images of the world, while upholding the complementary significance of the still image. For Mehran Mohager in his T.V. Series (The Light Is Out The Room Is Dark), the play between the screen and the printed or written word, the photographic image and the media image, defines the heart of his work, the structure of the separate images that he joins to create his triptychs. The television is governmentcontrolled and therefore relatively conservative, while many of the newspapers are liberal, but the contrast is not necessarily political. In one triptych by Mohager, the printed text at the center of the television screen is a page from a history of photography text; in another, from a wall on a mosque, the texts are religious but the writing is poetic not dogmatic. In Scattered Reminiscences by Farshid Azarang, created in response to a novel by Goli Taraghi, photographs of the artist’s father, mother, and sister are set against images of a television screen filled with static, and one frame filled with a black card, suggesting the father’s death (the final image of the mother, blurred, Esmail Abbasi, Siegfried (42c) Esmail Abbasi, Tantalus (42d) Esmail Abbasi, Rumi (42b) 32 33 may follow the American photographer Duane Michals in using that device to suggest dying). This is at once an original approach to portraiture and a complex meditation on the personal as presented in photographs and as it exists in the age of mass media. There is a pathos in the aging (and deaths) of the subjects, framed by the tension between the old-style photographic image and the television screen as the medium linking us to the world and the primary source of images in contemporary culture. The sly, innocent-seeming viewpoint in Ja’fari’s Child’s View offers an unusual perspective, especially in an image that captures the sociological significance of the television as the focus of a domestic interior and as a kind of distraction: looking at the television, the old woman is not facing Ja’fari’s camera. The two short films by Seifollah Samadian might seem out of place in an exhibition devoted primarily to the still image. Yet Samadian is best known as a photographer, and his films do serve as a welcome reminder of the renaissance in the cinema enjoyed in Iran in recent years. Filmakers Abbas Kiarostami, the Makhmalbafs (Mohsen; his wife, Marzie Meshkin; and their daughter Samira) have become major international figures, and a host of others have also achieved recognition. One film, a study of a spider, indicates how cinema, as opposed to still photography, can exploit duration. It also suggests, behind its nature film facade, yet another glimpse of a philosophical approach to life. The other film, which observes a street with a skillful use of a telephoto lens, is an elegant study of Shahrokh Ja’fari, Child’s View 1 (20) 35 (Left) Shahrokh Ja’fari, Child’s View 2 (17) (Right) Shahrokh Ja’fari, Child’s View 4 (19) figures in the landscape, in this case figures set against a wintry world of snow and wind. Once again there are hints of an oblique commentary: the struggle depicted is not necessarily only against the elements, but against the difficulties of life in contemporary Iran. Everywhere in these photographs the private and the public are set against one another, the public world of the landscape, especially the street but even the war zone, against the private world of the home and the family. Photography has often been described as the most realistic of media, an objective instrument for recording the external world. All the more notable, therefore, is the inward, meditative, at times melancholy strain in Persian Visions, and the signs of reflexive selfconsciousness. In a manner that sometimes recalls Peress, with his love of mirrors, reflections and compositional complexity, there are windows that double the photographic image as a window onto the world, and peek-a-boo images with layers of space that provide glimpses of elements in depth and remind us that not all is open and accessible to view. A mirror occupies a key place among the gridded close-ups of eyes by Yahya Dehghanpoor (who studied in San Francisco with the American photographer Linda Conner), putting the viewer into the image. A quotation from the Sufi mystic Rumi accompanies the work: Mohammad Farnood, Survival (13) Mohammad Farnood, Daily Life (9) “Tomorrow I will take the box to the neighborhood and burn it at the intersection, until Moslems, Jews, and Zoroastrians see that there is nothing in the box but a curse.” There is also a dedication to “the worried eyes” that were “witness to the wars and genocide, and then were closed…eyes…memorialized by Daguerre’s box.” So the work indicts photography at the same time that it upholds its powers, and sets the viewer among the witnesses to the horrors of our age. Another work by Dehghanpoor presents the features of a woman with a mirror in the place where her mouth would be, with a red bar across it, as if to indicate speech or kissing is forbidden. The eye that peers out of the image at the viewer in a photograph by Ahmad Nateghi poses a different kind of critique, for his photographs are an indictment of Western materialism. In one an anxiouslooking woman is juxtaposed with the large, smiling face of a woman on a large billboard-style advertising poster; in another, a rummage sale contains a beveled mirror and a man’s suit held up by an unseen figure so that in a surrealist touch it looks like Ichabod Crane, the headless horseman. The color images by Tavakoli of his family present a domestic world of intimacy, warmth, delicacy. They display a sensitive touch and a wry tone, as in the sprightly color and pattern in the couch upon which the Mohammad Farnood, Myth of War (10) Mohammad Farnood, Norooz (11) 40 Kaveh Golestan, The Girl (8) Kaveh Golestan, Baby (5) 41 Kaveh Golestan, Ice (6) 42 (Right) Kaveh Golestan, Ruins (7) father dozes or reads, accompanied by his granddaughter. Yet these photographs, too, reveal an awareness of artifice at work, for they are staged candids, as the black backdrops and the mirror in a group shot makes clear. In the end, perhaps inevitably, it is the veil that is the central element in many of the works, and the dominant metaphor. Koroush Adim’s Revelations, three images of mysterious, veiled women, epitomize the exhibition and are notable even though the subject is a familiar one. In the West, the veiled Middle Eastern figure is a staple that has appeared both in the mass media, that is, on television, in newspapers and magazines, and in the contemporary art world, most notably in the work of the Iranian exile Shirin Neshat, probably the best-known figure associated with contemporary Iran—where her work has not been shown. Her Women of Allah series, in which she photographed herself with props, including a rifle, and then wrote poetry over her body on the images in a memorable combination of photography and text, feature the chador as the fundamental piece of clothing. In her videos the presence of women in their black chadors makes for stark imagery with undeniable political overtones. Mehran Mohajer, T.V. Series 4 (The Light Is Out The Room Is Dark) (34) 44 45 Mehran Mohajer, T.V. Series 1 (The Light Is Out The Room Is Dark) (33) 46 Mehran Mohajer, T.V. Series 3 (The Light Is Out The Room Is Dark) (35) 47 The presence of the veil in works in Persian Visions raises the issue of the status of women in Iran and the role of women as subjects in visual images. The chador is at the center of the cultural discourse about gender roles and the body, that is, sexual politics. Whether as an individual’s free choice or a product of the exercise of authority, the veil is at the center of the debates over traditionalism and modernity, and religion and society. These debates go beyond the present by drawing upon the entire history of Islamic and Iranian law and customs. And in turn that history is entwined with a cultural history in which the veil has metaphorical force as a symbol of all those elements that prevent or limit unmediated sight and representation. The photographers in Persian Visions include some who in effect indicate a wish to remove the veil, to see behind the veil by using the camera as an instrument of exposure and revelation. All the same, the veil has its uses as a source of pictorial mystery and ambiguity, with layering and concealment not indicative of social or religious customs but elements of art. The presence of the veil then becomes a sign that the photograph is neither mirror nor window, neither a reflection of the photographer’s (or viewer’s) own position and preconceptions nor an unmediated, wholly transparent opening onto the world. The images that feature the veil acknowledge the complexity of representation, as in Adim’s images, where the Farshid Azarang, Scattered Reminiscences (44) 48 49 Sefollah Samadian, The White Station (60) 50 Yahya Dehghanpoor, Untitled (56) “revelations” are anything but simple. (Hamid Severi informed me that in Adim’s title the Farsi terms translated as “revelations” might be rendered more literally as “what enters into the heart,” that is, inspiration or internal revelation, rather than revelation as an act of external disclosure that contrasts with concealment. He also noted that the chadors in Adim’s photographs are patterned, not black, and associated with private, intimate, and personal space and atmosphere rather than the public realm.) Yahya Dehghanpoor, Untitled (55) In spite of the (too-) frequent use of the veil in pictures by outsiders of Iran and the Islamic world, the veil remains an unavoidable sign of the culture, a shorthand device that suggests the complexities surrounding the process of representation and, more generally, acquiring knowledge. If the chador, with its play of revelation and concealment, is a central element in many works in Persian Visions, so the gaze, whether confrontational and turned back at the viewer, or more relaxed, inviting and even friendly, appears equally important. Figures look out of the image at the viewer in many of these works. Even in the portrait of his own family by Tavakoli, in which the artist himself appears in the tableau and the gazes that meet the camera appear friendly and inviting, the distance between 52 (Right) Yahya Dehghanpoor, Untitled (57) Ahmad Nateghi, Cologn (4) (Right) Ahmad Nateghi, Untitled (1,2,3) viewer and viewed suggests a threshold of perception, a subtle existential boundary. The outward gaze presented by this photograph and others calls attention to the reciprocal gaze of the viewer inward, toward the photographs, and heightens awareness of the entire process of photographing and looking at photographs. The experience of Iran offered by Persian Visions is of necessity incomplete. The dance of clarity and mystery that animates so much of the work is an intricate, elaborate one. Yet viewers can nevertheless be transported through the skill and imagination displayed by the artists. That does not mean being united through some simple notion of shared humanity in the manner of The Family of Man, or being removed to some transcendental aesthetic realm. There is a healthy difficulty and obscurity in many of the photographs. The refusal to offer straightforward images is sometimes deliberate, as in the dense symbolism of Pazooki or the unusual spatial rendering of Ja’fari, and in effect serves as a demand that the viewer look harder and think harder about what can be shown and experienced through the visual, and about the special challenges posed by contemporary Iran to anyone who chooses to make pictures. Ahmad Nateghi, Untitled (2) (Right) Ahmad Nateghi, Untitled (1) Shahriar Tavakoli, My Family (Hallelujah 4) (48) Shahriar Tavakoli, My Family (Hallelujah 2) (46) 58 59 Shahriar Tavakoli, My Family (Hallelujah 1) (45) Shahriar Tavakoli, My Family (Hallelujah 3) (47) 60 61 Photography has always been able to create the illusion of the elimination of distance by bringing—to borrow a phrase from Georgia O’Keeffe—the faraway nearby. Persian Visions cannot entirely surmount the physical and cultural distance between Iran and the United States. The exhibition nevertheless builds a visual bridge that allows for differences even as it leads viewers to become aware of other ways of being and seeing. Persian Visions is admirable as a good-will gesture and a display of international cooperation through cultural exchange. Yet in the end it is the art that matters most, and in that regard the English translation of the title of Adim’s work strikes precisely the right note, for Persian Visions is full of revelations. Robert Silberman Associate Professor Department of Art History University of Minnesota 62 (Right) Koroush Adim, Revelations 2 (52) (Left) Koroush Adim, Revelations 1 (54) 65 Exhibition Checklist 1 Ahmad Nateghi, Untitled 19.5” x 23.25” 2 Ahmad Nateghi, Untitled 24” x 17.5” 3 Ahmad Nateghi, Untitled 17.25” x 24” 4 Ahmad Nateghi, Cologn 24” x 17.5” 5 Kaveh Golestan, Baby 14” x 16” 6 Kaveh Golestan, Ice 14” x 16” 7 Kaveh Golestan, Ruins 14” x 16” 8 Kaveh Golestan, The Girl 14 “ x 16” 9 Mohammad Farnood, Daily Life 22” x 26” 10 Mohammad Farnood, Myth of War 22” x 26” 11 Mohammad Farnood, Norooz 22” x 26” 12 Saeed Sadeghi, Their Hands Are In Pain 22” x 26” 13 Mohamamd Farnood, Survival 22” x 26” 14 Saeed Sadeghi, Their Hands Are In Pain 14.5” x 20” 15 Saeed Sadeghi, Their Hands Are In Pain 16” x 20” 16 Saeed Sadeghi, Their Hands Are In Pain 15” x 20” 17 33 Shahrokh Ja’fari, Child’s View 2 16.5” x 16.5” 18 Shahrokh Ja’fari, Child’s View 3 16.5” x 16.5” 19 Shahrokh Ja’fari, Child’s View 4 16.5” x 16.5” 20 Shahrokh Ja’fari, Child’s View 1 30” x 30” Mehran Mohajer, T.V. Series 1 (The Light Is Out The Room Is Dark), 19” x 14” (each piece) 34 Mehran Mohajer, T.V. Series 4 (The Light Is Out The Room Is Dark), 19” x 14” (each piece) 35 Mehran Mohajer, T.V. Series 3 (The Light Is Out The Room Is Dark), 19” x 14” (each piece) 37 Arman Stepanian, Untitled 37” x 25” 38 Arman Stepanian, Untitled 27.25” x 38.25” 39 Arman Stepanian, Untitled 27.25” x 38.25” 40 Arman Stepanian, Untitled 27” x 38” 21 Shokoufeh Alidousti, Self-Portrait 1 24” x 18.5” 22 Shokufeh Alidousti, Self-Portrait 2 24” x 18.5” 23 Shokufeh Alidousti, Self-Portrait 3 24” x 18.5” 24 Shokoufeh Alidousti, Self-Portrait 4 24” x 20” Ebrahim Khadem Bayat, Untitled 14.5” x 23” Ebrahim Khadem Bayat, Untitled 23” x 16.5” 27 Ebrahim Khadem Bayat, Untitled 17.75” x 23” 28 Ebrahim Khadem Bayat, Untitled 23” x 18.25” 29 Majid Koorang Beheshti, Untitled 29” x 45” 30 Majid Koorang Beheshti, Untitled 29” x 43.5” 31 Majid Koorang Beheshti, Untitled 32” x 44” 32 Majid Koorang Beheshti, Untitled (3 in a series) 19” x 25” Shahriar Tavakoli, My Family (Hallelujah 1) 29” x 29” 46 Shahriar Tavakoli, My Family (Hallelujah 2) 29” x 29” 47 Shahriar Tavakoli, My Family (Hallelujah 3) 29” x 29” 48 Shahriar Tavakoli, My Family (Hallelujah 4) 29” x 29” 49 42a 52 43a Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 1 28.25” x 28.25” 43b Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 2 28.25” x 28.25” 43c Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 3 28.25” x 28.25” 43d Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 4 28.25” x 28.25” 43e Bahman Jalali, Image of Imagination 5 28.25” x 28.25” 66 45 Leila Pazooki, Untitled 50.20” x 73.43” Esmail Abbasi, Generous Butcher 27.25” x 19.25” 42b Esmail Abbasi, Rumi 27.25” x 19.25” 42c Esmail Abbasi, Siegfried 27.25” x 19.25” 42d Esmail Abbasi, Tantalus 27.25” x 19.25” 26 Farshid Azarang, Scattered Reminiscences (12 in a series), 12.5” x 16” Farshid Mesghali, Untitled (Figure on Bench) 26.75” x 35.75” 50 Farshid Mesghali, Untitled (Girl & Fishes) 26” x 35” 51 Farshid Mesghali, Untitled (3 Figures on Bench) 25.25” x 35.25” 41 25 44 Koroush Adim, Revelations 2 19.5” x 29.25” 53 Koroush Adim, Revelations 3 19.5” x 29.25” 54 Koroush Adim, Revelations 1 19.5” x 29.25” 55 Yahya Dehghanpoor, Untitled 23” x 23” 56 Yahya Dehghanpoor, Untitled 35” x 23” 57 Yahya Dehghanpoor, Untitled 26” x 38” 59 Sadegh Tirafkan, Persepolis (2 in a series) 20.5” x 28.5” 60 DVD Seifollah Samadian, The White Station (Right) Koroush Adim, Revelations 3 (53)