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“
25 YEARS OF SEPARATION ”
IRANIAN ART
AFTER THE REVOLUTION
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Art
exhibition opens at Articultural Gallery in Los Angeles
from November 7 to December 8.
Opening
reception on Friday, November 7, 7 –10p.m.
Curated
by Farzad Karimi, the exhibition features works by Seyed Alavi,
Samira Alikhanzadeh, Blue Hadaegh, Taraneh Hemami, Shahram Karimi,
Habib Kheradyar, Alina Mnatsakanian, Sourena Mohamadi, Shirin
Neshat, Haleh Niazmand, Mahgameh Parvaneh, Hamid Rahmanian,
Shideh Tami.
Articultural
Gallery
10469 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90025
310-481 9052
Gallery hours: Wednesday-Thursday 1 to 5 PM., Friday-Saturday
11 to 6 PM.
It
has been 25 years since the Iranian revolution and the displacement
of Iranians throughout the world. In this exhibition 13 Iranian
artists living around the world will show their work in a symbolic
gesture to bridge the gap that has been created in the past
25 years. The artists consist of two groups, one group which
is educated and have resided outside of Iran since the 1979
revolution, and the second group of artists who have been educated
and remained in post-revolution Iran. In conjunction with the
exhibition, there will be screenings of films by Shirin Neshat,
Blue Hadaegh and Hamid Rahmanian.
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| Seyed Alavi’s
work is often engaged with the poetics of language and space and
their power to shape reality. He makes art that is close to life,
art that is available and accessible to viewers from many diverse
backgrounds. He has created site-specific installations for the
New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, Franklin Furnace, the
deSaisset Museum, the Museum of Santa Cruz County, and the University
Art Museum/Cal State Long Beach. He also has worked on many publicly
commissioned pieces and has been the recipient of numerous grants. |
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| Samira Alikhanzadeh’s
paintings are both poetic and haunting. She combines painting and
found photographs to discover a new identity for women within Iran.
She is shown regularly at the Golestan Gallery and at Tehran’s
Museum of Contemporary Art. |
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| Taraneh Hemami
explores the issues of displacement, preservation, and loss, while
creating personal as well as collective archives that transform
cultural memory into the material world, creating a record and a
documentation of a specific time, place and people. Ms. Hemami has
exhibited her work in venues such as San Francisco Arts Commission
Gallery, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, The Lab and SF Moma Artist's
Gallery in San Francisco, Fowler Museum in UCLA, as well as A Space
in Toronto, and the Sharjah Museum in UAE. Her works have been reviewed
in publications including the New York Times, the Los Angeles Time
, the San Jose Mercury News, Artpapers, Artweek, and Mix Magazine. |
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| Shahram Karimi
makes artwork that is influenced by Eastern traditions and the abstract,
minimal and conceptual art of the West. This combination makes his
work unique with an artistic language if his own. One of the paintings
in this exhibition includes a humble portrait of Shirin Ebadi, winner
of 2003 Noble Peace Prize. At his most recent exhibition at the
Istanbul Biennale, he received great reviews. |
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| Habib
Kheradyar works within the extended field of painting, using
tradition as a structural grid but mapping out new possibilities.
He explores relationships of two with three dimensions, material
and immaterial. These works interact with light. Fabric, together
with its shadow, produce interference patterns -- also known as
the moiré effect. As the viewers navigate around the work,
movement is insinuated within it. Mr. Kheradyar has had numerous
solo and group exhibitions, and his work appears in many private
collections and at the LA County Museum of Art. |
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| Sourena
Mohamadi’s photographs refer to something outside the
frames. That "something" might be anything the viewer
finds relative to those objects. It is the way the viewer creates
meaning for his photographs. |
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| Alina
Mnatsakanian’s sound installation titled “Introduction”
deals with social issues and identity. Through workshops and individual
contacts, a group of youth between the ages of 14-18 communicated
with her and with each other and wrote introductions about themselves.
Introductions were then recorded in the languages of the participants.
Ten participants and 12 languages are present in this installation.
Ms. Mnatsakanian recently received a grant by the California Council
for Humanities. |
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| Haleh
Niazmand’s digital art titled “The Survey of Common
Sense” is an art project that uses the methodology of polls
to address an array of contemporary social issues. The structure
of this work involves the audience’s participation as an integral
part of the art, making it observational or interpretive, but it
is during this participation that its purpose is revealed. The work’s
general strategy calls for a re-evaluation of our judgmental rights,
focusing on the uneasy and the paradoxical worldview. Ms. Niazmand’s
art has been exhibited widely in many galleries and museums, including
the San Diego Museum of Art, the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, the
Des Moines Art Center, A space Gallery, and the University of Arizona
Art Museum. |
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| Mahgameh
Parvaneh creates beautiful and colorful photographs dealing
with the subject of the hejab (veiling). She shows regularly at
the Rahe Abrisham Gallery in Tehran. |
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| Shideh
Tami’s sculptures are about disfigurement which one could
interpret as pressures brought on by rigid social rules in the society
she lives in. She has shown widely in her native Iran and abroad
including, The National Arts Club NY, Cite International des Arts
in Paris and Golestan Gallery in Tehran. |
back to past exhibitions page
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