Haft Negah 2014 // Iranian Art Expo

It’s that time of year again!

The Niavaran Culture Center in Tehran hosts the 7th annual edition of Iran’s Seven Views (Haft Neghah), an art expo coordinated by seven major art galleries.

This year, the seven original galleries have invited an additional 7 galleries to part take in the expo. The Aria, Elaheh, Dey, Golestan, Haft Samar, Valli, Mah-e Mehr, The Aran, Etemad, Hanna, Dastaan Basement, Seen, Seyhoun, and Tarrahan-e Azad galleries will all participate in this years celebrations taking place from November 14 to 28.

The exhibition will showcase paintings, sculptures, and calligraphy from 350 artists featuring 400 works that respond to this year’s exhibition motto, “Every Iranian Home, One Artwork”.

Some of the well-known artists showcasing their artworks this year include Sohrab Sepehri, Mohammad Ehsaii, Aidin Aghdashlu, Parviz Tanavoli, Iran Darrudi, Farideh Lashaii and Parvaneh Etemadi.

Make sure not to miss this one of a kind artistic event!

Iranian Artists at Christie’s 2014 Dubai Auction [Part II]

Last week was part two of Christie’s “Modern and Contemporary Arab, Iranian and Turkish Art” auction, which took place 21 October 2014 in Dubai. Out of a total of 121 lots, 31 of them were works by Iranian artists.

Christie’s reports that the auction had the highest sale total for the category since 2010, realizing a total of $12,510,875 from the $8.5 million estimate. 19 new artist records were set, including Iranian artists Bahman Mohassess and Koorosh Shishegaran.

Tavoos reports:

Highlights of the last night`s auction include “Bergere a Alamein” an artwork by the Egyptian artist Mahmoud Said (1897-1964) sold for $869,000, “Nasser and the Nationalization of the Canal” by another Egyptian artist Hamed Ewais (1919-2011) sold for $557,000 and “Untitled” by Iraqi artist Mahmoud Sabri (1927-2012) which sold for $425,000.

The record for Iranian artworks sold at the auction was set by “The Last Poet of Iran”, a painting by veteran artist and sculptor Parviz Tanavoli sold for $365,000, followed by “Untitled” a painting by Sohrab Sepehri from his “Tree Trunk” series and an artwork by Farhad Moshiri entitled “Toothpicker” which both sold for $269,000. Works by other Iranian artists such as Ali Banisadr, Manoucher Yektai, Charles-Hossein Zenderoudi, Ali Shirazi, Leyli Matin-Daftari, Houshang Pezeshknia, and many others were also sold during the last night’s auction.

All in all, a great haul for Iranian and Middle Eastern art!

Tehran Art News // 03 October 2014

Tehran Art News // 03 October 2014

The city of Tehran boasts a vibrant art scene for the beginning of October!

Homa Art Gallery // Mensheat
An exhibition of the works of Azra Aghighi Bakhshayeshi
through 7 October, 2014.

Negah Gallery // Ojan Shirozhan
An exhibition of paintings
from 10 October – 29 October, 2014.

Golestan Gallery // Hell, Purgatory, Heaven
An exhibition of the works of Shirin Mohseni
from 3 October – 8 October, 2014.

Aaran Gallery // To The Bone
A solo exhibition from Leila Ghandchi
from 3 October, 2014.

Hossein Khosrojerdi: Redefining Home | Tara Gallery

“Fluidity—not stagnation—drives my work. As a contemporary artist whose life has been varied by circumstance and change, I refuse to be constrained by specific style or genre. I feel a responsibility as an artist to reflect the inconsistent reality we live in.” – Hossein Khosrojerdi

IMG_4509

Last Saturday we at Tara Gallery had the distinct privilege of hosting the opening reception of our current exhibition, Redefining Home by acclaimed Iranian artist and expatriate, Hossein Khosrojerdi. This exhibition marks Khosrojerdi’s first solo show in the US and features work from different periods of his life, from before and after his emigration from Tehran to London. His ‘mummies’ series, making objective representations of all people depicting no particular time, place or identity; his buildings series, exploring the dichotomy between the instability of foundations and its reconstruction as a new beginning; and his most recent works, abstractions of line and space, making a poignant commentary on human interactions.

IMG_4504

The highlight of every opening reception for us is getting the chance to chat with our audience and the promise that with each new person, there is a unique understanding of the art we hope to share. [The Persian treats don’t hurt, either!] Redefining Home runs until October 15th and the gallery is open Tuesday – Sunday, 11 – 6. Be sure to stop by and see this incredibly poignant exhibition.

Take a look at some photos from the opening and thanks to everyone who came!

Art News // 05 September 2014

Lawrie Shabibi gallery in Dubai will host Act & Application, a group exhibition that brings together six contemporary artists from around the world: Ra di Martino, littlewhitehead, Arthur Prior, David Rickard, Darren Harvey-Regan and Iranian artist, Setareh Shahbazi from September 15 to October 29, 2014.

Here’s a little background on Shabazi:

Iranian Setareh Shahbazi’s starting point for her projects is photographs: family photos, film stills, postcards, magazine clippings and more. In her series Spectral Days, Shahbazi revisits family photos she stumbled upon from her visit to Tehran in 2009, conjuring up memories of her family’s exile from Iran following the revolution. With a healthy disregard for the sanctity of photography as a mirror of reality, she breaks down the images using digital manipulation. Blending, dissolving and over-painting the images to further decontextualize her subjects she engages our imagination in read infinite possible narratives.

The exhibition will run until 29 October 2014.


Tehran’s Niavaran Cultural and Historical Complex is hosting an exhibition of paintings by the Qajar era painter Mohammad Ghaffari (1847-1940), known as Kamalolmolk, at the Sahebqaranieh Palace.

The exhibition displays 30 works by Kamalolmolk, who served as a court painter during the reign of Qajar king Nasser ad-Din Shah.

In this busiest period of Kamal-ol-Molk’s artistic life, he created over 170 paintings. Unfortunately, most of these paintings have either been destroyed or taken abroad.

The works he created in this period indicate his desire to discover the laws of oil painting. He advanced so much that he even acquired laws of perspective by himself and applied them to his works. His mastery in the delicate use of a brush was well as bright and lively colors distinguished him from his contemporaries.

The exhibition runs until September 24th.


Art by Emerging Iranian Artists to be shown in NYC

Curated by Roya Khajavi-Heidari and Masud Nader, Rogue Space Gallery in NYC presents PORTRAITS: REFLECTIONS BY EMERGING IRANIAN ARTISTS. [via Tehran Times]

Works by a group of emerging Iranian artists will be showcased in an exhibition at the Rogue Space Gallery in New York during September.

The works have been selected by Roya Khajavi-Heidari and Masud Nader for the exhibit entitled “Portraits: Reflections by Emerging Iranian Artists”.

Paintings, photos, sculptures, and mixed media and video works by over 20 artists, including Ahmad Morshedlu, Alishia Morasaii, Arash Sedaqatkish, Babak Bidarian, Bahar Behbahani, Dadbeh Basir, Hossein Edalatkhah, Jinus Taqizadeh, Morteza Purhosseini, Nasser Bakhshi, Samira Alikhanzadeh, and Sepanta Qasemkhani, will be put on display at the exhibition, which will be held from September 17 to 29.

The artists were born, raised and educated in the United States.

“The emphasis on emerging Iranian art does not aim to ghettoize the artists either geographically or philosophically,” Khajavi-Heidari and Nader said in a press release.

“Rather, by holding such a show in New York City—the epicenter of the global contemporary art market—we hope to highlight the talent of these seldom-recognized artists and to celebrate their courage, stamina and love of their craft,” they added.

Mojdeh Gallery to show work by influential Iranian artists

Paintings by a group of veteran Iranian modern artists will be put on display in an exhibition at Tehran’s Mojdeh Gallery on Friday.

Works by 29 artists, who have had major roles in influential movements in Iran’s contemporary art, have been selected for the exhibit, curator Mojdeh Tabatabaii said in a press release on Tuesday.

Works by Sohrab Sepehri, Hossein Zendehrudi, Parviz Kalantari, Gholamhossein Nami, Qobad Shiva, Ahmad Esfandiari and Farideh Lashaii are seen among the selected works, she said.

The collection contains different styles of paintings, such as figurative, naturalism and surrealism, that have been created with other different techniques.

Tabatabaii also added that the artworks will be offered at reasonable prices providing the facility for people from all walks of life who would like to have artwork in their homes.

The exhibit will be running for 10 days in the gallery, which is located on 18th St., North Allameh, in the Sadatabad.

[via Tehran Times]

Open Call: MOPCAP 2015

Magic of Persia announces an open call to Iranian artists around the world for their annual Contemporary Art Prize. Read below to learn about the Prize and eligibility requirements. Best of luck to all applicants!

THE VISION
The Magic of Persia Contemporary Art Prize (MOP CAP) is a worldwide search for the next generation of contemporary Iranian visual artists who have the potential to make a significant impact in their field. The goal of the prize is to provide an opportunity for emerging artists to gain international exposure, and to engage in artistic experimentation and cultural exchange. Through its archival material, including an online artist database and printed publications, MOP CAP aims to provide an educational interchange and contribute to the development of Iranian art and culture.

THE PROCESS
MOP CAP is open to young, emerging Iranian visual artists, living in and outside of Iran, through an online application. The profiles of all eligible entrants to the open call are reviewed by the MOP CAP Selection Committee, and a shortlist of up to 21 artists is compiled.

The MOP CAP Shortlist Exhibition in Dubai showcases works of the selected artists, at which time the Judging Panel meet to deliberate on, and choose, up to seven Finalists. Subsequently, an exhibition of the Finalists’ work is held in London, where the Judging Panel meet once again to select the MOP CAP Winner.

Throughout the process, the Selection Committee are available to the artists for guidance, should they request it.

THE PRIZE
The MOP CAP Winner receives a one-year mentorship with a London-based curator, resulting in a solo-project at a leading gallery space in London; as well as a three-month residency at the Delfina Foundation.

ENTRY CRITERIA

Artists must apply through an online open call via the MOP CAP website. The next open call will be held 1-31 July 2014.

Eligible applicants are:

of Iranian origin, living in or outside of Iran;
35 years or younger at the time of application;
yet to have had a solo-exhibition outside of their country of residence;
not represented by any galleries outside of Iran.
Each applicant must submit the following with their application, with all text submitted in English:

An up to date CV that details the exhibitions that you have participated in;
A biography, of up to 1,000 words, including education and personal history;
A video of up to 3 minutes in which you further discuss your practice (this video can be in either Farsi or English);
High resolution images or videos of between 3 – 5 artworks, including a description of each work.

[Source: Magic of Persia]

New York Gallery features Iranian Art

Located in New York City, the Taymour Grahne Gallery seeks to “highlight artists from across the world, including the Middle East, Africa, South East Asia, South America and their Diasporas.” Fixed Unknowns is currently on view from July 14 – September 6, 2014 and features the work of Kamrooz Aram, Shirana Shahbazi, and Hannah Whitaker. Read more about the show in the press release before, courtesy of the Taymour Grahne Gallery.

PRESS RELEASE
The red eye of a flower escapes from its stem, multiplies and migrates across the canvas. Three spheres of uncertain scale hover over a black field, as marbles poised to be dispersed, or planetary bodies frozen in orbit. A circle acts as the aperture through which we see–and as the subject pictured.

The works by Kamrooz Aram, Shirana Shahbazi, and Hannah Whitaker in Fixed Unknowns draw upon classical genres of image-making—the portrait, the landscape, the still life. Each artist introduces a syntax: a repeated grid of floral motifs lifted from a Persian carpet; an overlapping series of geometric planes; a pattern sourced from a Bauhaus textile, hand-cut on a screen. They trouble the seeming fixity of these repeating designs, and their attendant politics and histories, through near-erasures and imperfect cover-ups.

Whitaker sees the film plane as a formal system, and as a site to “foster confusion.” She places paper screens in the body of the camera, which obstruct the light and allow for various visual vocabularies to coexist. Shahbazi’s geometric compositions appear digitally rendered, but are in fact produced through multiple exposures of three-dimensional objects. With each installation, she regroups the works, playing with “how the photographs question each other, enrich each other.” Aram describes his paintings as “unstable,” as he in turn inscribes, coats over, scratches away, glosses, and smears his canvas: each “erasure always leaves its own mark.”

About the Curators

Ava Ansari is an artist and curator. She has previously worked at Basement Gallery, Dubai, and Silk Road Gallery, Tehran. As an artist, she has presented work at Dixon Place, La Mama, Eyebeam, the AC Institute, among others. Ava is the co-director of The Back Room, a curatorial and pedagogical project, facilitating exchanges between artists in Iran and the US. She is the manager of the Edge of Arabia US Tour.

Molly Kleiman is a deputy editor of Triple Canopy, a magazine that advances a model for publication that encompasses digital works of art and literature, public conversations, exhibitions, and books. She is co-director of The Back Room, a curatorial and pedagogical project facilitating exchanges between artists in the US and Iran. She teaches at NYU’s Gallatin School for Individual Study.

About the Artists

Kamrooz Aram received his MFA from Columbia University in 2003. Recent solo and two-person exhibitions include Palimpsest: Unstable Paintings for Anxious Interiors at Green Art Gallery (Dubai, UAE); Kamrooz Aram/Julie Weitzat The Suburban (Chicago, Illinois, 2013); Brute Ornament: Kamrooz Aram and Seher Shah, curated by Murtaza Vali, at Green Art Gallery (Dubai, UAE, 2012); Negotiations at Perry Rubenstein Gallery (New York, 2011); Generation After Generation, Revolution after Revelation at LAXART (Los Angeles, 2010); and Kamrooz Aram: Realms and Reveries at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (North Adams, Massachusetts, 2006). He has shown in numerous group exhibitions including Beauty Reigns: A Baroque Sensibility in Recent Painting at McNay Art Museum (San Antonio, 2014); roundabout, City Gallery (Wellington, New Zealand, 2010); the Busan Biennale (2006); P.S.1/MoMA’s Greater New York 2005; and the Prague Biennale I (2003). Aram is one of the winners of the Abraaj Group Art Prize 2014. His work can be found in public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH; and M+, Hong Kong. He lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

Shirana Shahbazi studied photography at the Fachhochschule Dortmund, Germany, and Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst in Zurich, Switzerland. She has had solo exhibitions at The New Museum (New York); The Hammer Museum (Los Angeles); Fotomuseum Winterthur (Winterthur); Barbican Art Gallery (London); Galerie Bob van Orsouw (Zurich); Swiss Institute (New York); Centre Culturel Suisse (Paris); Museum Boijmans van Beuningen (Rotterdam); among others. Recent group exhibitions include New Photography 2012, The Museum of Modern Art (New York). Shahbazi lives and works in Zurich.

Hannah Whitaker is an artist and a contributing editor for Triple Canopy. Recent exhibitions include solo shows at M+B (Los Angeles), Galerie Christophe Gaillard (Paris), Thierry Goldberg (New York), Locust Projects (Miami), and Rencontres d’Arles in France, where she was nominated for the Discovery Prize. She co-edited Issue 45 of Blind Spot magazine and co-curated its accompanying show at Invisible Exports in New York. Her work is currently on view on billboards in Cincinnati as a part of a yearlong public art exhibition organized by the Cincinnati Art Museum. She is based in Brooklyn.

[Source: Taymour Grahne Gallery] [Image: Kamrooz Aram | Untitled (Palimpsest #20) | 2013 | Oil, oil pastel + wax pencil on canvas]

Mashhad to host International Symposium on Contemporary Sculpture

Interesting news via the Tehran Times – we’ll update with more information as it comes in.

The city of Mashhad will be playing host to an international symposium on contemporary sculpture in August.

Organized by Padide Shandiz Dream City, a tourist site near Mashhad, the symposium will be held in the city from August 16 to September 5, secretary of the symposium said in a press conference on Monday.

A number of Iranian and foreign sculptors have been invited to attend the symposium, he added, giving no specific names for the sculptors.

In addition, young talented artists are asked to participate in the event, he said.

The festival aims to promote visual arts, train young creative talents, redecorate the city, and also boost tourism in the region, he remarked.

He further noted that 35 works will be selected for the symposium, and the final selected works will be displayed across the city.

The best top three sculptures will be announced during the closing ceremony at the end of the symposium. The first place winner will receive a $12,000 cash prize, the second $10,000, and the third $7,000.

[Source: Tehran Times] [Image credit: Padide Art]