56 artist show Iran Inside Out – Will election unrest fan the debate about Iranian contemporary art?
Posted by artradar on June 30, 2009
IRANIAN CONTEMPORARY ART EXHIBITION US
New York’s Chelsea Art Museum is holding its “groundbreaking” exhibition Iran Inside Out (26 June to 5 September 2009) which features 35 artists living and working in Iran alongside 21 others living in the diaspora.
We are promised a “multifarious portrait of 56 contemporary Iranian artists challenging the conventional perceptions of Iran and Iranian art”. However, do not be at all surprised if unfolding events in Iran and the very art itself will result in heated debate and deep schisms about this interpretation.

Pooneh Maghazehe, Hell's Puerto Rico Performance Still, 2008 copyright artist
The debate was ignited by ‘Unveiled’, a show of Middle Eastern art (half of it Iranian) at The Saatchi Gallery London in the early months of this year. The exhibition garnered plenty of critical attention but strongly divided views were expressed about the success of the organisers’ claim to overturn the cliched idea that the Middle East is synonymous with violence and intolerance.
According to Henry Chu of LA Times , “Unveiled is an exhibition which offers an alternate vision: the Middle East as a source of lively, stimulating contemporary art — informed by conflict, certainly, but not consumed by it.” Nonsense, says Dorment in The Telegraph who claims the show is replete with references to bombs, religious police and the denigration of women.
This debate will be fanned anew by recent political disturbances in Iran. Relations between foreign powers and Iran are now severely strained following the disputed re-election on 12 June of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
“Iran has repeatedly accused foreign powers – especially Britain and the US – of meddling after the 12 June election, which officially handed him a decisive victory” says the BBC while The New York Times gives us a specific quote:
President Obama, who made his most critical remarks of the Iranian leadership on Friday, when he called the government’s crackdown “outrageous” … said the prospects for a dialogue with Iran had been dampened.
…“Didn’t he say that he was after change?” Mr. Ahmadinejad asked. “Why did he interfere?”
Unfolding political events will challenge the New York show’s curators, artists and museum staff and test their courage. Even before the protests, in reference to Iranian art in ‘Unveiled’, the Guardian was saying:
It is still amazing how far into politics this art bravely goes and it is no overstatement to speak of bravery in this case. One of the artists represented here, who lives in Tehran, is muffled in the gallery’s publicity shot to conceal his identity. Another, the prodigiously gifted Tala Madani, has escaped Tehran for Amsterdam but still refused to have her face revealed in a photograph. Guardian
The museum’s website raises the interesting point – and this is perhaps the nub of it – that artists in the diaspora and at home in Iran choose different forms of expression:
Ironically, contrary to one’s expectations, the artists living abroad often draw more on their cultural heritage, while those on the inside focus more on issues of everyday life without much regard to what ‘the outside’ views as specifically Iranian references.
But, whereas the museum’s writers see the focus of home-based artists on the ‘everyday’ as an act of choice, there are some who suggest it is an act of self-preservation. Time will tell whether the description of this show will be excoriated like that of the catalogue description of ‘Unveiled’:
In her catalogue introduction to .. ‘Unveiled: New Art from the Middle East’, Lisa Farjam airily dismisses European perceptions of the Middle East as a place synonymous with political oppression, religious intolerance, and terrorism as unthinking ‘clichés’ that prevent us from understanding the richness and diversity of Muslim societies.
All I can say in response is that the artists in this show profoundly disagree with her sunny take on this part of the world. The evils Westerners see from a distance are the everyday context in which many of these painters and sculptors make their work – and it was precisely to escape repression at home that so many of the best of them now live in New York or Paris.
Their art isn’t (like so much Western art) about consumerism or celebrity or art itself; it’s about suicide bombers, religious police, unending war, and the denigration of women in Islamic societies. While I admit I was surprised that those still working in Tehran feel able to treat the subjects of gender, sexuality, religion, and politics without risking imprisonment or death, among the photos of the artists displayed at the end of the show, I noticed that one, who still lives in Tehran, has taken the precaution of wearing a balaclava. Telegraph
Related links: Exhibition description on Chelsea Art Museum site
Catalogue
In a still unusual and much-appreciated move, the museum has put the show’s catalogue online. It is a glorious glimpse of a very active art scene. Text and works by artists sit alongside interviews with collectors and galleries. Buy the ‘Iran Inside Out’ catalogue here.
FEATURED ARTISTS:
Inside Iran (35)
Abbas Kowsari, Ahmad Morshedloo, Amir Mobed, Alireza Dayani, Arash Hanaei, Arash Sedaghatkish, Arman Stepanian, Barbad Golshiri, Behdad Lahooti, Behrang Samadzadegan, Bita Fayyazi, Daryoush Gharahzad, Farhad Moshiri, Farideh Lashai, Golnaz Fathi, Houman Mortazavi, Jinoos Taghizadeh, Khosrow Hassanzadeh, Mahmoud Bakhshi Moakher, Majid Ma’soomi Rad, Mehdi Farhadian, Nazgol Ansarinia, Newsha Tavakolian, Ramin Haerizadeh, Reza Derakshani, Reza Paydari, Rokni Haerizadeh, Sadegh Tirafkan, Saghar Daeeri, Shahab Fotouhi, Shirin Aliabadi, Shirin Fakhim, Siamak Filizadeh, Siavash Nagshbandi, Vahid Sharifian
Outside Iran (21)
Ala Ebtekar, Alireza Ghandchi, caraballo–farman, Darius Yektai, Kamran Diba, Leila Pazooki, Mitra Tabrizian, Nazanin Pouyandeh, Negar Ahkami, Nicky Nodjoumi, Parastou Forouhar, Pooneh Maghazehe, Pouran Jinchi, Roya Akhavan, Samira Abbassy, Sara Rahbar, Shahram Entekhabi, Shahram Karimi, Shirin Neshat, Shiva Ahmadi, Shoja Azari
Related posts:
- Myanmar artists explore new media, produce courageous art – Apr 09
- Historic show documents development of Cambodian art – Forever Until Now – Mar 09
- Review round up – Saatchi Middle East show Unveiled – Feb 09
- 28 Iranian women artists in 3 decade survey Masques of Shahrazad London – Feb 09
- Gender examined in Pergamon museum of Islamic art’s exhibition of Iranian contemporary art – Aug 08
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This entry was posted on June 30, 2009 at 3:41 pm and is filed under Activist, Identity art, Iranian, Islamic art, Middle Eastern, Museum shows, Nationalism, New York, Overviews, Performance, Political. Tagged: Abbas Kowsari, Ahmad Morshedloo, Ala Ebtekar, Alireza Dayani, Alireza Ghandchi, Amir Mobed, Arash Hanaei, Arash Sedaghatkish, Arman Stepanian, art in Muslim societies, art New York, Barbad Golshiri, Behdad Lahooti, Behrang Samadzadegan, Bita Fayyazi, caraballo–farman, Chelsea Art Museum, contemporary Iranian art, Darius Yektai, Daryoush Gharahzad, Farhad Moshiri, Farideh Lashai, Golnaz Fathi, Houman Mortazavi, Iran Inside Out, Iranian Art, Iranian artists, Iranian contemporary art, Islamic art, Jinoos Taghizadeh, Kamran Diba, Khosrow Hassanzadeh, Leila Pazooki, Mahmoud Bakhshi Moakher, Majid Ma’soomi Rad, Mehdi Farhadian, Middle Eastern art, Mitra Tabrizian, Nazanin Pouyandeh, Nazgol Ansarinia, Negar Ahkami, Newsha Tavakolian, Nicky Nodjoumi, Parastou Forouhar, politics and art, Pooneh Maghazehe, Pouran Jinchi, Ramin Haerizadeh, Reza Derakshani, Reza Paydari, Rokni Haerizadeh, Roya Akhavan, Saatchi Gallery, Sadegh Tirafkan, Saghar Daeeri, Samira Abbassy, Sara Rahbar, Shahab Fotouhi, Shahram Entekhabi, Shahram Karimi, Shirin Aliabadi, Shirin Fakhim, Shirin Neshat, Shiva Ahmadi, Shoja Azari, Siamak Filizadeh, Siavash Nagshbandi, Tala Madani, Vahid Sharifian, world powers. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
DVP said
A powerful interview with Shirin Neshat about the Green Revolution: http://www.flypmedia.com/issues/plus/09/#1/1