The 4th Annual Tehran Auction

The 4th Annual Tehran Auction took place on 29 May 2015 at Tehran’s Parisian Azadi Hotel. The auction featured over 300 works of art by some of the greatest contemporary Iranian artists of note. Established names such as Sohrab Sepehri, Parviz Tanavoli, Farhad Moshiri, Bahman Mohassess, Hossein Zenderoudi, Reza Derakhshani, Farideh Lashai, Behjat Sadr, Koorosh Shishegaran, Seyed Mohammad Ehsai, Abbas Kiarostami, and the great Kamal al-Molk, himself – Mohammad Ghaffari.

This year’s Tehran Auction generated an astounding 7,264,323.87 USD in sales! These record breaking numbers are a sure testament to the strength and power which art holds in Iran and its market. The Tehran Auction is a privately developed initiative organized by former head of the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, Dr. Alireza Samiazar. It began as “an endeavour to fulfill the increasing interest in modern and contemporary Iranian art and to facilitate the acquisition of the best quality works of various genres. It also aims to support the domestic art market as a key basis for the international market.”

Our director, Homa Taraji, was in Tehran working closely with the Auction team – hopefully soon we will have some behind the scenes goodies for you all!

View the catalog here, and view the auction results here.

Check back on Tara Gallery’s blog for more updates, soon!

Film Screening At LACMA: Monir

Monir is a 2014 documentary about the life and works of Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, one of Iran’s most preeminent artists. Directed by Bahman Kiarostami and produced by Layla Fakhr, Monir is an in depth look at Farmanfarmaian who rose to attention in the 1970s with her breathtaking geometric mirror work. Farmanfarmaian’s recent work is being shown at the Haines Gallery in San Francisco concurrently with a retrospective exhibition of her work in New York’s Guggenheim Museum.

The documentary will be screened at LACMA’s Bing Theater on Thursday, May 26, 2015, 7 PM. The event is free and open to the public. Here’s a little about the film, according to the documentary’s official site, MonirDocumentary.com:

The film provides a close-up view into a woman’s artistic career that has spanned over half a century. It explores a range of factors that have made her one of the most innovative and influential artists of the Middle East, from her method of constructing mirror mosaics to uncovering her past, the extreme political changes in her own country and her subsequent migration to New York. With a musical score by composer Hooshyar Khayam and the Kronos Quartet, the camera meets Monir, now back in Tehran after 30 years. Her return sparked an artistic rebirth and although she is now aged 90, she is at the peak of her career.

Below is an excerpt from an interview between Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmian and curator of the Guggenheim exhibition, Suzanne Cotter of the Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art in Porto, Portugal:
 

 
For our Persian speakers, here is BBC Persian’s piece on the Monir’s exhibition in New York City’s Guggenheim Museum:

 
 
Hope all of you can make it to the screening to enjoy what is sure to be a beautiful, inspiring, and informative film!
 
 
 

[Image via Monir Documentary]

 
 

Tehran’s Giant Open Air Art Gallery

The advent of large-scale advertising has forever changed metropolitan landscapes. Walk down any street in any city and one is sure to be bombarded with massive images of cars, perfume, fast food restaurants, upcoming films… and just about any commodity imaginable. Despite the fact that most people don’t pay explicit attention to the billboards littered around their city, advertising has a way of getting into one’s subconscious – consumerism makes us clamor for ‘things’ rather than critical thought. But, what would happen if a metropolitan city were to replace their advertisements for art?

The city of Tehran is doing just that. From May 6 through May 16th, the billboards of Tehran will showcase over 1,500 international works of art, rather than the usual advertisements of gadgets and appliances. For 10 days, the mayor of Tehran, Dr. Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf, together with the Organization of Beautification of Tehran [responsible for decorating walls, parks and other public spaces, including billboards] have turned the very city of Tehran into an art gallery. Massive billboards plastered with Persian miniature paintings, images of Iranian carpets, scenes inspired by the Shahnameh [Ferdowsi’s epic poem, The Book of Kings], works by Sohrab Sepehri, Bahman Mohassess, Mahmoud Farshchian, but also Munch’s The Scream and Magritte’s The Son of Man. Works by Henri Cartier-Bresson, Mark Rothko, Rembrandt, Cézanne, Picasso, and hundreds of other artists.

The response has been hugely positive: The Guardian reports on comments from the Iranian public in Tehran —

Sadra Mohaqeq, an Iranian journalist with the reformist Shargh daily in Tehran, was delighted.

“It’s pretty exciting. It’s wonderful to see billboard ads of laundry machines or big corporate banks being replaced by a Rembrandt or a Cézanne or a Picasso, what better than that? […] For 10 days, people have time off from the usual billboard ads just promoting consumerism. It is going to affect people’s visual taste in a positive manner.”

Mohammad Babaee, another Tehrani citizen, said he was delighted to see works he had never seen before. “I had never heard of Barge Haulers on the Volga but now I get to see a big picture of it every day in Hemmat highway.”

Elaheh Khosravi said she had to rub her eyes twice in disbelief. “When I woke up this morning, something strange had happened,” she wrote on the Iranian news website Khabaronline. “I thought I was dreaming, I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. Tehran had turned into a museum.”

Shargh said the art had transformed Tehran into a giant canvas. “This is a very commendable move. It’s a festival of colour and movement,” it wrote.

Whatever the purpose, it’s quite an amazing feat – one that brings inspiration and conversation to the public and makes for an altogether heightened aesthetic city experience.

Click here to view images of the billboards across Tehran via Hamshahri Photo Agency
 
 

[Image via The Guardian]

 
 

Iran to Address Lack of Copyright

This past Monday marked the Fifth National Convention on Literary and Artistic Works’ Property Law held at Tehran’s Vahdat Hall. The intention of the convention was not to come to a decision as to whether Iran is likely to join the Universal Copyright Convention of Berne, nor is Iran joining the Universal Copyright Convention any time soon. Rather, Ali Jannati – the Minister of Culture and Islamic Guidance – drew attention to the fact that there can be no hesitation or delay in coming to a solution with respect to safeguarding and preserving Iranian artistic and literary property law.

As of yet, Iran has no laws protecting intellectual property so artists of all mediums have very little legal support if they should need it. Jannati had the following to say about the matter:

“Art and literary ownership is not just a mere legal issue, it is of great significance considering the cultural, social and economic aspects, and that is why we need to concentrate on it as a national topic. We have witnessed an individual who spent his entire life producing an artwork only to have it imitated, leaving the person without any incentive to create a new one. We have also seen or heard that prominent figures have published their works in other countries since they can enjoy their (legal) support. Or that an Iranian publisher publishes a high-quality translation of a book, but within a short period of time a series of low-standard translations of the same book hit the market. These are all warnings indicating that we need to find a final solution for reviving Iranian Art.”

Jannati stressed that the point is to hinder any further decline of the production of Iranian art, saying, “It is not wise to kill more time in this respect. The solution is easy. It is not prudent to seal the country’s borders and turn it into an island. The borders and boundaries are gradually fading away in the present era.”

[via Tehran Times and Iran Daily]

18th Iranian Film Market Showcases 150 Iranian Films

The 18th Iranian Film Market runs from April 27th – May 2nd, 2015. Several Iranian film organizations such as, Farabi Cinematic Foundation, Press TV, Deayat Media, IIDCYA, Hozeye Honari, Eshragh Institute, IRIB Channels, and DEFC, have been presenting their films to the foreign guests of the 33rd Annual Fajr Film Festival.

Below are some of the films being shown this year:

We Have Guests, Angels Come Together, Mezar Sharif, Rana’s Silence, Nahid, 360 Degrees, Wednesday 19th Ordibehesht, Haji Shah, Fatness, Time For Love, Confessions of My Dangerous Mind, The Blue Sky of My Mother, Iran Burger, Paris to Paris, Morning of the 7th Day, Bet, Father of the Other, I Am a Mother, All That Men Do Not Know about Women, Bloody Wednesday, Parviz, One Night, A Man Who Became a Horse, From Tehran to Heaven, Dandruff, Red Carpet, Snow, Two, Closer, Taboo, Rainy Station, and We Are All Alone.

Documentaries presented by DEFC include: Atlan, I Want to Be a King, Mr. Workless, The Dolls Do Not Know, Fried Fish, The Host, The Law of the Jungle, Champions, and the Robes.

In addition to the films mentioned above, over 300 short, animated, and feature-length films will also be shown to international guests. Maryam Naghibi, head of the Iran Film Market, said more than 300 short films, animated films and feature films were presented to international guests.

This is an incredible event where people from all over the world gather to see what Iran’s filmmakers have to offer. Delagates from film festivals around the world, producers, filmmakers, and those eager for collaboration all attend the Film Market to make connections, network, and perhaps find cinematic gems to share with audiences at home.

[Image via Tehran Times]

Contemporary Artist Y.Z Kami at Gagosian

“When you go through the process of looking at a face and you meditate on it with pigments and brushes in hand, it is like living with the face. In a way, it becomes part of you.”
—Y.Z. Kami

Famed Iranian born painter Y.Z Kami is having an exhibit at the Gagosian Gallery in London, UK. His exhibit featuring various painting of people, domes, and hands in prayer will run from April 8th until May 30th, 2015.

According to the Gagosian Gallery website, Kami’s portraits of introspective subjects project a broad and inviting presence. Using his own photographs of family, friends, and strangers as source material, he depicts faces as vessels to convey an almost sacred and universal atmosphere of reflection, often with eyes closed as though in meditation.

The matte surface of his paintings resembles fresco, while the closely cropped, centered compositions evoke El Fayûm portraits of ancient Egypt. Beginning with a primary paint layer in warm terra cotta, subjects are rendered in a uniform sfumato that evokes a light tremor, imparting to the paintings the effect of movement.

This sense of vitality may stem from the viewer’s own associations with photographed figures in motion, but it transcends even the veracity of photographs. Kami does not aim to create photorealistic portrayals; rather, he seeks to evoke the presence of spirit.

In recent large-scale portraits, Kami emphasizes the process behind the paintings, taking mysterious liberties in his representation of individual features, as in the arresting Man with Violet Eyes (2013–14). In Daya (2014), a male subject in profile, he recreates a vivid memory of their first encounter. A thin strip of the earthy primary paint layer is visible at the bottom edge of the canvas, a glimpse behind the otherwise even surface of indeterminate skin textures and hair tones.

Depictions of hands joined in supplication, a common action spanning faiths, directly indicate Kami’s enduring concerns. White Dome paintings similarly convey a sense of universal spirituality in the form of a central white light that spills over countless rows of tiny white rectangles like mosaic, hand-painted or stamped onto the canvas.

A single Black Dome alludes to the flipside of such enlightenment: Kami cites as examples the nigredo phase of metal decomposition during alchemical processes, and the spiritual crisis known in Catholicism as the “dark night of the soul.”

His paintings possess a distinct sense of fluidity—between the various faiths and texts that constitute his philosophical influences; between representation and abstraction; and, most unexpectedly, between painted portrayals and life energies.

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Photos and Information courtesy of Gagosian Gallery Website

Bonham’s Holds New Auction Featuring Iranian Art

Bonham’s auction house announced 20 new Iranian artists to be added to their collection starting April 20th, 2015.

The new announced auction titled A Century of Iraqi Art and Modern and Contemporary Middle Eastern Art featured works by artists from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Palestine, and Tunisia.

Some of the highlights of the auction included celebrated artist Sohrab Sephehri whose two works were  sold at the staggering price of $119,000 and $128,000, greatly surpassing their estimates which were between $52,000 to $74,000.

Another prominent highlight of the auction was the artwork named “Alef” by Iranian artist Farhad Moshiri which was offered with an estimated price of $74,000 to $100,000. Moshiri also surpassed his estimate and sold for a whooping $128,781.

The highest priced lot however went to Iraqi artist Shakir Hassan Al Said whose work titled “Cubist Cockerel” sold for $289,571.

To get the full list of works sold along with their final prices, you can visit the Bonham’s website.

25th Annual UCLA Celebration of Iranian Cinema

This Saturday marks the beginning of UCLA’s Celebration of Iranian Cinema – a three week long film festival screening 11 films from Iranian filmmakers – both from within Iran and around the world. Sponsored by Farhang Foundation and held at the Billy Wilder Theatre at the Hammer Museum in Westwood Village, the film festival aims to “explore the diverse currents of Iranian cinema with its annual series highlighting recent and classical films from Iran and the Iranian diaspora.”

The festival kicks off this Saturday, April 25th at 7:30 PM with award-winning filmmaker Rakhshan Banietemad’s Tales (Ghesse-ha / قصه ها) who will be in attendance for a Q + A after the screening of her film and a VIP reception [check out the trailer for her film below]. This year’s festival line up will screen films by by both established filmmakers and highly regarded emerging artists. Along with Rakhshan Banietemad, Shahram Mokri, Kamran Heidari, Sepideh Farsi, Zhinous Pedram and Amir Badie will also be in attendance for Q + A panels and sessions throughout the festival.

Iran’s cinematic history is a long and fruitful one, spanning more than a hundred years. Since the 1990s, Iran has been widely considered one of the best exporters of cinema in the world, with figures such as Abbas Kiarostami, Jafar Panahi, Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Samira Makhmalbaf, Asghar Farhadi, and Majid Majidi being amongst the most prolific and highly regarded filmmakers of Iranian New Wave cinema. What’s incredibly exciting about this film festival is not only that it is one of the longest running Iranian film festivals in the United States, but that it consistently serves to bridge the gap between the two countries and creates a dialogue between people separated by more than just physical miles. One can only imagine that cultural exchanges such as this only continue to blossom hope in the hearts and minds of everyone who takes part.

The festival runs through Saturday, May 16, 2015. For more information about program schedule, please visit Farhang Foundation’s event page. For tickets, please visit https://www.cinema.ucla.edu/events/2015/iranian-cinema!

Trailer – TALES (Rakhshan Banietemad, 2014)

 
 

UCLA Celebration of Iranian Cinema

When: Saturday, April 25 – Saturday, May 16, 2015

Where: Billy Wilder Theater, Hammer Museum, 10899 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles

Cost: $10; FREE to all UCLA students with valid ID; $8 other students, seniors and UCLA Alumni Association members with ID.

 
 
 

Upcoming Exhibitions: Fereydoun Ave in Tehran

Veteran artist Fereydoun Ave is having not one, but two exhibitions held concurrently in Tehran this month!

Tehran based gallery Sam Art Gallery is exhibiting an installation by the artists titled ” References, Cues & Favorite Things”. This exhibition will run until April 20. 

Concurrently, the Dastan’s Basement gallery will be showcasing his other work titled “7 works on paper” until April 25.

Both exhibitions together are said to show the various facets of the artist’s vision as a whole.

According to the British Museum website, artist Fereydoun Ave (Tehran, Iran, 1945) is currently based in Tehran and Paris.

He attended school in England, then studied Theatre Arts at Arizona State University where he received a BA in Theater Arts.

He continued his education at the Film School of New York University (1969–70).

Prior to the Iranian Revolution, he worked as a stage and graphic designer at the Iran American Society in Tehran,  and was resident designer for the National Theatre, Tehran,  as well as advisor to National Iranian Television and the Shiraz Arts Festival.

Between 1974 and 1979 he was acting artistic director of the Zand Gallery in Tehran.

After the Revolution in 1979, Ave created his own alternate space, 13 Vanak Street, which stopped working in June 2009.

Ave’s work is represented in various collections in the US including that of Cy Twombly’s Foundation, as well as the Contemporary Art Museum, Tehran; the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Lloyds Bank, Geneva.

If you have a chance, be sure to go see these exciting exhibitions showcasing an artists who is considered to be a major player in the Iranian art scene in Tehran!

 

Prominent Artists from Iran’s Street Scene

The Iranian art world spans across so many various styles and mediums, ranging from traditional, to contemporary, and much in between.

One of the highest rising art styles in Iran however is the Street Art which directly depicts political, economical, and social issues of its era.

In an effort to beautify the landscape of the cities of Iran, there have been several projects commissioned for artists to paint on buildings and empty spaces, however many street artists have had to remain underground because of the censorship in Iran and it’s policy against graffiti due to its often critical nature.

There are four different streets artists which have risen to great popularity in the last few years due to their artistic skill, originality, and ability to speak to the masses.

Emerging from Tabriz, brothers and stencil artists Icy & Sot began their professional career in 2008, but have been creating work on the streets since 2005. Their graffiti addresses issues of love, hate, peace, war, despair, hope, children, society and Iranian culture. They have held numerous exhibitions worldwide and their unofficial street artworks have appeared in Iran and throughout Europe, South America and the United States.

During an interview with Brooklyn Street Art, the artist duo said about the nature of their work:

“In our opinion Street Art itself is a kind of political art, because it says something directly to the people. […] we are communicating our visions to the people with walls. […] Because the streets are for everyone but the galleries are limited and all we want is to communicate our visions to the people.”

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Icy and Sot, 2014, New York.

Tehran-based artist and designer Mehdi Ghadyanloo began decorating his native city’s high-rises and office buildings about eight years ago, with monumental surrealist and hyper-realist murals produced by himself and his company, Blue Sky Painters. Ghadyanloo’s graffiti blurs the lines between architecture, art and the urban environment, as well as between reality and fiction.

Unlike most street artists, Ghadyanloo is able to do his work legally for the most part as he gets commissioned to paint buildings. In a recent interview however, Ghadyanloo speaks about the legal aspects of graffiti and how because due to its strict policies, most other artists can only create as part of an underground scene:

“Graffiti is illegal here in Iran, like in many other countries, so graffiti artists in Tehran work at night. We have [a] very good underground street artist [network].”

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Mehdi Ghadyanloo, ‘Childhood Dream’, 2011, Tehran.

Black Hand is the epitome of the illegal aspect of mural and graffiti art in Iran. He is considered Iran’s Banksy by many, and has revealed that he takes inspiration and is heavily influenced by the UK artist’s style and artistic philosophy. Like Banksy, Black Hand engages with social and political issues. His art is provocative but is not meant as protest – rather, as a way to find peace.

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Black Hand, 2014, Tehran.

GhalamDAR has a distinctive style that sets him apart from the rest of his fellow street art practitioners. Rather than being influenced by the mainstream graffiti styles coming in from the West, he takes inspiration from traditional Iranian art forms such as calligraphy (khattati or khoshnevesi) and miniature painting (negargari).

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GhalamDAR, ‘Segregation #1′, 2014, Karaj.

GhalamDAR comments on the originality of himself and many of his contemporaries, hoping to see more Iranian artists engage in their own culture for inspiration:

“In this modern period, we are able to take our own elements, visual culture, our own literature for inspiration. We have had a lot of artistic circles throughout the last century that have experimented with traditional forms. We could do it [with graffiti], but most prefer to emulate. In my opinion, we still don’t have an authentic Iranian street art movement; right now most of us are just replicating what is being produced in the U.S. and Europe.”

While street art may not find appreciation everywhere, it is impossible to deny it as an emerging art form that holds importance to Iran and it’s society.

Street art is the art of the people, by the people, and for the people.

These four artists are only a few of many which can be found sprawled across the streets of Iran, and even across the world.

Graffiti is a tradition and art form that spans across decades and continents. It is fascinating to see how different places draw on the keys components of it, but find ways repurpose it to fit the social and political needs of that location.