Khaleej Times

Iran’s blooming art scene: A bubble of hope

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tehran — A gallery opening in northern Tehran, and a typical scene: silk scarves barely clinging to the backs of women’s heads, young hipsters, gentlemen in that most un-revolution­ary of items — the tie.

Trendy, wealthy and in their element, the packed crowd edges around abstract sculptures, somewhat grotesque portraits and looped cartoons by US-based Iranian artist Pouya Afshar.

The work has clear Iranian and religious themes, drawing on traditiona­l mourning ceremonies, yet the censorious rulers of the Islamic republic — still deeply ambivalent about the liberating and libertine tendencies of the art world — feel a world away. Afshar, 33, himself epitomises the globe-trotting Iranian middle and upper classes. He teaches at a US university yet is still drawn back “like an itch I always need to scratch”.

Such return trips have become less fraught since 2013, when a new moderate government eased social pressures and rebuilt ties with the West.

The past decade has seen the number of galleries in the city explode from just a handful to more than 100.

The clerical establishm­ent still monitors all art for anything deemed un-Islamic or obscene, but a public space has opened up for young creatives to live in a way that would have seemed impossibly daring just a few years ago. Nima Zaare-Nahandi, whose finely detailed abstract drawings feel unattached to any time or place, pushes back against the idea that his nationalit­y should dictate his style.

The challenge, he says, is not to create some single idea of Iranian art, but to build the institutio­ns that can nurture future talent. “We need more than just galleries, which are purely commercial. We need education, museums, a good review.” Slowly, those elements are starting to emerge, funded by a booming interest from local collectors. But the numbers are still small and many obstacles remain, says Hormuz Hematian, who founded the Dastan Gallery in Tehran five years ago. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Nima Zaare-Nahandi gestures during an interview at his house in Tehran. —
Reuters Nima Zaare-Nahandi gestures during an interview at his house in Tehran. —

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