The Tampa Tribune
'Echoes
In Blue' Showcases Contemporary Iranian Art
From The
Associated Press
Published: Apr
28, 2003
NEW YORK - The
painting is beautiful to see - an orange-striped curtain hangs from a wood pole
above a shimmering ocean - but the title ``Separation'' hints at another
meaning.
The curtain
painted by Shahla Etemadi represents those put up in Caspian Sea swimming spots
in Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution to keep men and women separate.
The painting is
a part of ``Echoes in Blue,'' an exhibition of contemporary Iranian artists on
view through April 29 at The National Arts Club.
Although Iran is
in the midst of a struggle between its reform-minded president, Mohammad
Khatami, and its hard-line clerical rulers, the exhibit's curators - both
Iranian exiles - hope to puncture the American stereotype that Iranians are
narrow-minded Islamic fundamentalists.
``If there is a
theme to the exhibit, it is the theme of freedom and the desire of the artist,
the society at large, for freedom and very much the lack of it in society
there,'' Hamid Ladjevardi said.
``There is a
beautiful side to the people of every country regardless of what their
government's rhetoric is or its actions,'' said his co-curator, Homa Taraji,
the president of Paradi, an international fine arts organization based in Los
Angeles.
The show of 55
paintings from 13 artists working in Iran today was put together with the
cooperation of The Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art. Although the Iranian
government requires artists to stay away from sensitive topics, including
politics and religion, many of the works demonstrate the struggle of living in
a revolutionary state, Ladjevardi said.
In ``Trapped''
by Shideh Tami, a dark hand emerges from the bottom of the painting and wraps
itself around the neck of a female face painted in melancholy blues, blacks and
grays.
In Hossein
Khosrowjerdi's ``Paper Boat,'' two men in mud-caked bandages stand in dark
water and gaze forlornly at a tiny boat made of notebook paper.
And the highly
geometric paintings of Rezvan Sadeghzadeh feature groups of women, their backs
to the viewer, wearing brightly colored scarves and floor-length dresses. In
some, such as ``Nude Woman,'' one woman is isolated from the group because her
head is not covered.
Not all the
works in ``Echoes in Blues'' are political, however. Four still lifes show
sunflowers and wildflowers in vases on tables. And all the works can be
appreciated for the skill shown and variety of technique, which includes oil
painting, digital images and mixed media.
Both curators
have lived in the United States for decades, but came about their connection to
contemporary Iranian art in different ways.
Ladjevardi's
family owned a large Tehran corporation, which was putting together a
collection of contemporary Iranian art for its new headquarters when the
revolution came. The paintings and building were seized, he said. He had
already earned multiple college degrees in the United States and, after the
revolution, pursued a successful business career here.
Taraji moved to
California in the 1970s for a master's degree and then went to work in the
aerospace industry there. Three days before she was to return home, Iranian
students stormed the U.S. embassy in Tehran and took 52 Americans hostage.
Except for one
trip in the early 1980s, Taraji did not return to Iran until 2001. Art had
always been a hobby, and when she did return she found ``an amazing flourishing
of contemporary art.''
Since then,
Taraji has traveled to Iran several times to gather works for the show and to
consult with the curator of the Tehran museum, which received a gold medal of
achievement from The National Arts Club last week upon the opening of ``Echoes
in Blue.''
As for
Ladjevardi, he has not been back to Iran since the revolution.
``This exhibit
is a good way for people of the U.S. to understand that no matter ... how much
darkness envelops a country in terms of its art and culture, the light of
Iranian art can never be totally repressed,'' he said.
``Echoes in
Blue'' is scheduled to travel to California for a show in late September at the
Hedi Khorsand Gallery in West Hollywood. Stops in Houston and Washington, D.C.,
are also planned.
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On the Net:
National Arts
Club: http://www.nationalartsclub.org/
AP-ES-04-21-03
1425EDT
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