Apollo Magazine (UK)

Cultural evolution

An ambitious survey of Iranian art elegantly spans the ancient and modern worlds, writes Sameer Rahim

- Epic Iran

Exhibition­s ‘Epic Iran’ by Sameer Rahim

29 May–12 September

Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Catalogue by John Curtis, Ina Sarikhani Sandmann and Tim Stanley

ISBN 9781851779­291 (hardback), £40 (V&A Publishing)

In Britain, at least, Iranian culture is always being discovered. William Morris and Edward Burne-Jones led the way with their loans to the ‘Persian and Arab Art’ exhibition at the Burlington Fine Arts Club in 1885. In 1931, more than 2,000 objects were displayed at the ‘Internatio­nal Exhibition of Persian Art’ at the Royal Academy, facilitate­d by Iran’s monarch Reza Shah Pahlavi. Though the RA show prompted public and scholarly interest, Iran’s Islamic revolution of 1979 has blinded the West to the country’s rich history. The

British Museum called its 2005 blockbuste­r on ancient Persia, ‘Forgotten Empire’.

Now we have the V&A’s pointedly titled ‘Epic Iran’. The term ‘Persia’, bestowed by the Greeks, has murky colonial connotatio­ns, and Pars (or Fars) is the name of a specific area in south-western Iran. In any case, Darius the Great described himself as an ‘Aryan’, an early form of ‘Iranian’, and if it was good enough for Darius, it should be good enough for us.

The exhibition is modest in scale (around 300 objects) but large in ambition. It takes us from the earliest surviving proto-Elamite objects, via the splendours of Sassanian metalware and glorious Safavid book illustrati­ons, right up to post-revolution feminist photograph­y. It is a whirlwind journey that non-experts may find slightly dizzying – especially as the informatio­n provided is sometimes scanty. Still, the curators have intelligen­tly matched motifs that crop up across the millennia, lending artistic coherence to the story of a nation which, despite multiple upheavals, retains a strong sense of its own identity.

There is a welcome emphasis on previosly undervalue­d pre-Achaemenid objects. A bronze axe head from around 2000 BC is topped by a pair of sinewy male wrestlers, one held in a headlock who appears to be biting his opponent’s buttocks. Another highlight is a gold and copper cut-out mouflon with curved horns covered in gold. From the Elamite period, a thousand years later, there are gold beakers embossed with horned animals. Most eye-catching, though, is a pair of figures (16cm high) cast in bronze, perhaps a king and queen. The woman has an elaborate honeycomb hairdo, and wears a trailing dress designed with stars and circles; a bird perches on her left hand.

Moving into the more familiar Achaemenid dynasty, there are plaster casts of reliefs at Persepolis showing Persians and Medes

holding hands. A beamed display shows how these figures would have originally been colourful – offering a preview of 16thcentur­y book paintings. As do the four gold horses pulling a chariot, each head bobbing with lovely realism (Fig. 1).

The V&A has borrowed the Cyrus Cylinder from the British Museum but doesn’t do much with it. We don’t even get a proper translatio­n, let alone an analysis of its importance to modern Iranians. After being dug up from Babylon in 1879 by Hormuzd Rassam, the cylinder has somewhat dubiously been cited by Iranian leaders as various as the last Shah and Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d as the first document of human rights. Of course, it’s more about supposedly benevolent dictatorsh­ip – Cyrus allows the conquered people their own gods in exchange for obeisance.

The Arab invasion in the seventh century is often seen as a dramatic break, and for the Zoroastria­ns whose religion was superseded by Islam, it surely was. But as well as retaining their own language – though the script was Arabised – Iranians preserved many cultural touchstone­s. Silver Sassanian dishes show kings crowned with a crescent moon, which morphed into the familiar Islamic symbol. That same auspicious moon appears in a Safavid-era battle scene illustrati­ng Firdowsi’s 10th/11th-century epic Shahnameh or Book of Kings, which tells the semi-mythical stories of Iran’s ancient rulers and heroes. This stunning work features orange, gold and blue armour worn by charging horses, as well as the pointed steel helmets of their riders – an actual example of which is also displayed.

Such images should not be described as ‘miniatures’, suggests one of the curators, Tim Stanley, because they are in dynamic conversati­on with the poetry they are depicting. (Time to retire the term ‘Persian miniature’ in favour of ‘Iranian book illustrati­on’?) As Michael Barry has argued, their surface beauty should not blind us to their deeper meanings. The 14th-century painting of Prince Humay visiting his beloved Princess Humayun, who stands atop a blue-tiled and gold-bricked tower, symbolises the human search for divine knowledge. The princess is the daughter of the emperor of China, which the Prophet Muhammad recommende­d Muslims visit to gain knowledge, and also from where Iranian artists borrowed artistic styles. The swooping birds allude to the spiritual quest in Attar’s great Sufi poem The Conference of the Birds – whose hero, the ‘Simurgh’, is a Chineseder­ived dragon-like creature, which pops up here in a 17th-century illustrati­on from the

Book of Kings

More recent Iranian art is given a welcome showing. The 19th-century Qajar ruler Nasir alDin Shah was a keen photograph­er; the painter Ismail Jalayir might have been working from the monarch’s own photos for his group portrait of harem ladies in European-style short skirts. Nasir al-Din himself is painted by Muhammad Isfahani in surprising­ly informal fashion, leaning back on a sofa. It’s likely the painting was based on a photo, and that the ruler wanted to be comfortabl­e during the long exposure time.

Researchin­g Qajar-era photograph­s in the 1990s, the artist Shadi Ghadirian found many shots of women. She created her own powerful images in the same style, with modern objects anachronis­tically placed among traditiona­l ones. The woman in Ghadirian’s Qajar #19 (1998) stares directly out with a 19th-century studio camera and modern Leica by her side (Fig. 2). Her gaze challenges any preconcept­ions we might have about Iran and its culture. It is also quietly self-confident: Western technology, like that of other foreign cultures down the ages, has been absorbed by Iranians and made their own.

Sameer Rahim is managing editor (arts and books) of Prospect and the author of a novel, Asghar and Zahra (John Murray).

 ??  ?? 1. Model of a chariot, 500–330 BC, from the Oxus Treasure found in present-day Tajikistan, length 18.8cm. British Museum, London
1. Model of a chariot, 500–330 BC, from the Oxus Treasure found in present-day Tajikistan, length 18.8cm. British Museum, London
 ??  ?? 2. Qajar #19, 1998, Shadi Ghadirian (b. 1974), C-type print, 90 × 60cm. Private collection
2. Qajar #19, 1998, Shadi Ghadirian (b. 1974), C-type print, 90 × 60cm. Private collection

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