Rebel, Jester, Mystic, Poet: Contemporary Persians

Rebel, Jester, Mystic, Poet: Contemporary Persians

Rebel, Jester, Mystic, Poet: Contemporary Persians

Rebel, Jester, Mystic, Poet: Contemporary Persians

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Overview



Rebel, Jester, Mystic, Poet


tells the story of the evolution of Iranian contemporary art by examining the work of 30 artists.
This is art where the ills of internal politics remain astutely masked below a layer of ornamentation, poetry, or humor. What unites the disparate works into a coherent theme is the artists’ coping mechanisms, which consist of subversive critique, quiet rebellion, humor, mysticism, and poetry—hence the publications title.



The subtitle Contemporary Persians is also a reference to a strategy of survival, this one used by Iranians in the United States during the early 2000s; at a time when ‘Iranians’ were identified with hostage takers and terrorists, they adopted the identity ‘Persians’, which remained free of such associations.
This title collects the work of a number of artists who are already well-known in the United States, including among others Afruz Amighi, whose work is in the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and Monir Farmanfarmaian, who received a major exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum in 2015.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781911164319
Publisher: Black Dog Press
Publication date: 03/28/2017
Pages: 160
Sales rank: 1,061,926
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.10(h) x 0.80(d)

Read an Excerpt

"Rebellion is a sentiment alien to some artists. Among them is Shirazeh Houshiary (b. 1955), who seeks a world beyond strife. Abstraction has often been a conduit of spirituality, and Houshiary is arguably its main exponent in contemporary art. Her spirituality comes across in esoteric garb, through an art of concealment. Unlike the declamatory presence of mohabbat [kindness] in Ehsai’s work or heech [nothingness] in Tanavoli’s, Houshiary’s surfaces pullulate with words that do not fully appear. Inscribed by the artist but then erased, they advance and retreat as traces, as aura, as hints, as energy, as horizontal halos, and more. They intimate but do not divulge. They stand at the cusp of what is and what is not. Presence and absence oscillate back and forth, morph into one." —Fereshteh Daftari, Rebel, Jester, Mystic, Poet: Contemporary Persians






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