at Jill George Gallery 
18 May - 18 June 2010
Curated by David Gleeson and Aras Amiri in  collaboration with Azad  Gallery in Tehran.
Masoumeh Bakhtiary’s simple,          almost graphic pictures are a response to the political turmoil  of last          summer, exploring political and social unease. Recent graduate, Marzieh             Bagheri has produced a fascinating series of paintings  that use          cars and women to lament the unrealised ambitions of  post-revolutionary          Iran; and her fellow graduate Azadeh Baluchi  has produced          beautifully delicate images that examine the position and  identity of          modern Iranian women. The vividly coloured subjects of Samira             Eskandarfar include brief Farsi aphorisms and  Kahlo-esque imagery          in work that questions the depiction of women everywhere. Khosro             Khosravi paints dark and haunting tableaux that  paradoxically          reveal his skill as a colourist whilst referencing Iranian  history and          the dichotomy between the public and private realms of its  society. Hamed          Sahihi’s intriguing paintings, with faceless, confined          figures and eerily idealised landscapes, are poetic metaphors  for a dreaming,          dystopian society. Mohammad Mehdi Tabatabaie’s          remarkable panels are a personal diary of family life,  commenting on the          tension of modernity and tradition in the Islamic Republic.
Since the Revolution of 1979, Iran has been  depicted          as an oppressively rigid and censorious theocracy, provoking  both awe          and derision in the West. At the same time, it is acknowledged  as a centre          of fashionable artistic creativity: the films of Kiarostami and  Makhmalbaf,          for example, have long been acclaimed as hugely important, and  exhibitions          of Iranian visual arts have appeared at highly prestigious  European venues.
But such examples barely scratch the surface  of the          hugely vibrant and flourishing creative industries in major  Iranian cities.          Contemporary Iranian art has come of age and is at last being  taken seriously          by the Western art world. No longer should it be merely confined  to exotic          shows by institutions keen to prove the width of their  international vision.          This exhibition will introduce new work by celebrated Tehrani  painters          for the first time in London alongside some striking imagery  from two          recent young women graduates of Tehran’s Sooreh University.
It is, As it is, acrylic on canvas, 39.5" x 59", 100 x 150 cm, 2009
  It is, As it is, acrylic on canvas, 53" x 78.5", 135 x 200 cm, 2009
Denial, acrylic and ink on canvas, 39.5" x 59", 100 x 150 cm, 2010
 Denial, diptych, acrylic and ink on canvas, 39.5" x 39.5", 100 x 100 cm, and 12.5" x 12.5", 30 x 30 cm, 2010
 Utopia Ophelia, acrylic on canvas, 47.25" x 39.5", 120 x 100 cm, 2008
 Utopia Ophelia, acrylic on canvas, 39.5" x 39.5", 100 x 100 cm, 2008
  She Was Alone, oil on canvas, 39.5" x 31.5", 100 x 80 cm, 2008
 It's a Cat's Life, oil on canvas, 39.5" x 47.25", 100 x 120 cm, 2008
Silent, oil on canvas, 67" x 51", 170 x 130 cm, 2008
Silent, oil on canvas, 67" x 51", 170 x 130 cm, 2008
 What Would You Do?, triptych, acrylic on canvas, 15.75" x 51", 40 x 130 cm, 2010
 What Would You Do?, triptych, acrylic on canvas, 15.75" x 51", 40 x 130 cm, 2010
 Street, (detail), sextet, oil and mixed media on canvas, 19.5" x 118", 50 x 300 cm, 2009
 Untitled, triptych, oil on canvas, 47.25" x 68.5", 120 x 220 cm, 2009
Via Jill George Gallery
Related Link: DAVID GLEESON ON 'FROM TEHRAN TO LONDON'














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