In Memory of Sadegh Tirafkan, Iranian artist and photographer
Sadegh Tirafkan, Iranian Man, 2000, digital photo, edition 5
of 6, 64×48 cm. Courtesy AB Gallery Luzern & Zürich and ArtAsiaPacific.
by Mehran
Mohajer, ArtAsiaPacific
This past May, the Iranian art community mourned the loss of Sadegh Tirafkan, one of the country’s “new art movement” pioneers, to brain cancer at the age of 47. Known for his innovative blending of photography with other artistic media, Tirafkan was an early proponent of photo-based art in Iran and a prominent international representative of Iranian contemporary art.
Born in Karbala, Iraq, to Iranian parents in 1965, Tirafkan spent his childhood and adolescence in Ahwaz, southern Iran, where he volunteered to join the Iranian army during the war between Iran and Iraq (1980–1988). His early experiments in theater and filmmaking as a teenager led him to apply for a degree in photography at the Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Tehran on leaving the army. After graduating in 1990, Tirafkan remained committed to developing his own visual idiom, and it was this that set him apart from the many artists whose practices were informed by official narratives, or who were pursuing the dominant current of war-oriented documentary photography.
Though Tirafkan’s early works may ostensibly appear to be documentary in nature, the level of dramatic expression betrays a subconscious tendency toward staging, which can be attributed to his cinematic eye. Tirafkan adopted a method of “constructed photography,” combining the photographic image with hints of painting, a practice developed in tandem with his experiments in new media. His friendship with the painter Parvaneh Etemadi also had a strong impact on his work.
While the exploration and use of traditional Iranian
imagery is perhaps common among Iranian artists today, Tirafkan should be
credited as one of this style’s originators. Choosing historic sites like
Persepolis and Susa as his settings and referencing Iranian post-Islamic
history—the Ashura ceremony, Iranian ritual champion wrestling,
miniature painting and carpet motifs—Tirafkan introduced themes such as the
traditional identity versus the modern identity, notions of the self and the
problematizing of male psyche.
Tirafkan’s fastidiousness and perseverance pervades the entirety of his oeuvre. In 1986, within the extremely restrained socio-political atmosphere that followed the Cultural Revolution, he, along with some classmates, organized one of the first independent photography exhibitions in Tehran at the Ketab Azad gallery. It is for such examples of dogged commitment to his work that he should be remembered.
Translated by Helia Darabi.
Sadegh Tirafkan’s works are permanently housed in the collections of the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, British Museum, Brooklyn Museum and Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
Mehran Mohajer is an Iranian scholar and art
photographer. He is a faculty member of University College of Fine Arts, at the
University of Tehran and is one of the major translators of photography and art
theory textbooks in Iran.
Sadegh Tirafkan, Whispers of the East 7, 2006–7, digital photo collage, edition 5 of
6, 130×72 cm. Courtesy AB Gallery Luzern & Zürich and ArtAsiaPacific.
Sadegh Tirafkan, No. 4,
2012, mixed media with photos, 128×183 cm. Courtesy AB Gallery Luzern
& Zürich and ArtAsiaPacific.
Sadegh Tirafkan, Human Tapestry 9, 2011, mixed Media,
digital photo with hand knitted carpet frame, edition of 6, 148×185 cm.
Courtesy AB Gallery Luzern & Zürich and ArtAsiaPacific.
Sadegh Tirafkan, Whispers of the East 4, 2006–7, digital photo
collage, edition 5 of 6, 130×72 cm. Courtesy AB Gallery
Luzern & Zürich and ArtAsiaPacific.
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