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The Armory Show 2023: Group Presentation

Past viewing_room
24 August - 11 October 2023
  • The Armory Show 2023

    September 7- 10, 2023
  • At The Armory Show 2023, Dastan presents works by fourteen Iranian artists with approaches ranging from the poetic to the political, creating multi-faceted narratives over contemporary Iranian society's complex structures and workings. 

    The presentation features work by multiple generations of renowned artists, such as Reza Aramesh (b. 1970), Andisheh Avini (b. 1974), Homa Delvaray (b. 1980), Mehdi Ghadyanloo (b.1981), Hoda Kashiha (b. 1986), Farrokh Mahdavi (b. 1970), Nicky Nodjoumi (b. 1941), Asal Peirovi (b. 1985), Sepand Danesh (b. 1985), Mamali Shafahi (b. 1982), and Reza Shafahi (b. 1940), as well as the late Ardeshir Mohasses (1938-2008), Behjat Sadr (1924-2009), and Mohsen Vaziri-Moghaddam (1924-2018).  

    The presentation aims to host diverse perspectives, styles, techniques, and approaches, covering a broad spectrum of ideas and themes to delve into the intricate tapestry of contemporary Iranian society, weaving together narratives that unfold from multiple angles. In the face of numerous challenges and impediments, artistic expression aims to transcend geographical borders, resonating powerfully on an international level, thereby highlighting the universal language of art. 

    Dastan’s booth includes the sharply-toned drawings of the late Ardeshir Mohassess, Nicky Nodjoumi's astute political commentaries, and Reza Aramash's exploration of individualism. It puts together the caricatured figures of Sepand Danesh alongside Homa Delvaray's incisive critique of superstitions and traditions and Andisheh Avini's ingenious marquetry masks.

    Also showcased are Reza Shafahi's witty cultural observations, cleverly conveyed through a blend of sarcasm and innocence. Alongside his father, Mamali Shafahi delivers a visual feast adorned with hidden chimeras that defy categorization in his works. Behjat Sadr’s geometrically layered abstractions, Farrokh Mahdavi's captivatingly distorted portraits, Mehdi Ghadyanloo’s vibrant urban sceneries, Mohsen Vaziri-Moghddam's abstract reflections on motion and stillness, and Asal Peirovi's evocative travel diaries contribute further layers to the narrative. Moreover, Hoda Kashiha's dreamlike sequences challenge temporal boundaries, while satirical interpretations of contemporaries add a whimsical finale to the collection.

  • Installation view of Dastan's booth at The Armory Show 2023  Photo by Mo Jahangir (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view of Dastan's booth at The Armory Show 2023  Photo by Mo Jahangir (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view of Dastan's booth at The Armory Show 2023  Photo by Mo Jahangir (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view of Dastan's booth at The Armory Show 2023  Photo by Mo Jahangir (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view of Dastan's booth at The Armory Show 2023  Photo by Mo Jahangir (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view of Dastan's booth at The Armory Show 2023  Photo by Mo Jahangir (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Installation view of Dastan's booth at The Armory Show 2023

  • Reza Aramesh, Overview

    Reza Aramesh

    Overview
    Reza Aramesh (b. 1970, Iran) is an artist who focuses mainly on photography and sculpture. He currently lives and works in London, where he moved at 15. He received his MFA from Goldsmiths University, London (1997).

    Working in photography, sculpture, video, and performance, Reza Aramesh’s understanding of the history of art, film, and literature is ever-present in his artwork. As a commentary on war reportage, for example, Aramesh chooses images of violence appearing in newspapers, online articles, and social media, taking them out of their original context to explore the narratives of representation and iconography of subjected body apropos race, class, and sexuality. His work, as such, is a critical engagement with Western art history. 

    Reza Aramesh’s exhibitions: "Weltgeist" (Galerie Kandlhofer, Vienna, Austria, 2023) | "The many faces of the self" (Brussels, Belgium, 2023) | Muntref collection at MUNTREF Centro de Arte Contemporáneo (Buenos Aires, 2022) | Pejman Collection (Pejman Foundation, Tehran, 2022) | The 14th Bienal de la Habana (Havana, 2022) | Muntref Centro De Arte Contemporåneo (Buenos Aires, 2022) | Pejman Foundation (Argo Factory, Tehran, 2022) | The 9th Edition of Sculpture in the City (London, 2021) | Fitzwilliam Museum (Cambridge, 2020) | Asia Society Museum (New York, 2021) | Met Breuer (New York, 2018) | SCAD Museum (Georgia, Atlanta, 2018) | Akademie der Kunst (Berlin, 2016) | the 56th Venice Biennale (2015) | Art Basel Parcours (Basel, 2017) | Frieze Sculpture Park (London, 2015 and 2017) | Maxxi Museum (Rome, 2016). He has organized several performances and exhibitions in spaces like the Barbican Art Centre, Tate Britain, and ICA, London. His works have entered public and private collections worldwide, including the Tate UK, Lazaar Foundation, Rodin Museum, and Versaille Palace Collection - Zabludowicz Collection.

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  • 2022. Reza Aramesh & Homa Delvaray. Frieze London. Dastan Gallery. Art Fair. Installation View  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2022. Dastan Gallery. Soft Edge of the Blade. Frieze No.9 Cork Street. Installation Views  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery  Photo by Thierry Bal (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2022. Dastan Gallery. Soft Edge of the Blade. Frieze No.9 Cork Street. Installation Views  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery  Photo by Thierry Bal (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Installation view of Frieze London 2022

  • Andisheh Avini, Overview

    Andisheh Avini

    Overview
    Andisheh Avini (b. 1974, New York) is an artist and senior director at Gagosian, New York. He uses painting, drawing, printmaking, and sculpture, often incorporating the Iranian traditional craft of marquetry in his artistic practice. 

    Avini explores the duality of his identity (Iranian and American) by combining iconic images such as Persian calligraphy, decorative motifs, and portraiture with Western concepts of minimalism and abstraction. Avini's approach speaks to a larger globalized society of nomads, the displaced, and the wayfarer, reflecting a contemporary multicultural experience many can relate to. 

    He has held over 15 solo shows, and his work has appeared in more than 26 group exhibitions. He started showing his work at I-20 Gallery in New York in 2002.

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  • 2022 Andishe Avini Red White And Blue 2 Installation View (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2022 Andishe Avini Red White And Blue 2 Installation View (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    The Armory Show 2022 1401 Andisheh Avini And Iman Raad 2 Art Fair Installation View Photo By Ghaaflan Abadi 5 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Andisheh Avini Untitled 2018 Petrified Wood And Marquetry 19 1 X 14 X 12 7 Cm Aa 2018 0006 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2022 Andishe Avini Red White And Blue 2 Installation View (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    2022 Andishe Avini Red White And Blue 2 Installation View

  • Homa Delvaray, Overview
    Artists

    Homa Delvaray

    Overview
    Homa Delvaray (b. 1980, Tehran, Iran) is an Iranian graphic designer and visual artist living and working in Tehran. Since earning a degree in Visual Communication from the Faculty of Fine Arts, University of Tehran (2006), she has extended her work across various mediums, from installation to sculpture, textile art to artist books. 

    Her practice activates graphic and stage design overlap in a spatial framework. Her works, often presented as an installation of a group of objects, engage the architectural space using design and spatial strategies. A graphic designer by training, Delvaray employs the tools she has at her disposal to research and present what she observes as the paradoxical life within the dichotomies found in the life of contemporary Iranians. Her recent series investigates gender relations and how it has been formulated in mythological metaphors and tropes. 

    Her work has appeared in over 100 national and international exhibitions and festivals. It has been honored with many awards, including Distinction of Visual Communication Design (Taipei International Design Award, Taiwan, 2005) | Jury prize of Trnava Poster Triennial (Trnava, Slovakia, 2009). Some of her works are part of private and permanent collections such as the State Hermitage Museum (Saint Petersburg, Russia) | Cooper Hewitt (Smithsonian Design Museum, New York, USA) | Wilson Library (North Carolina, USA) | Musee Des Arts Decoratifs (Paris, France) | Poster Museum at Wilanów (Warsaw, Poland). She has been a jury member for many competitions and festivals, including "Golden Bee 13" (Moscow Global Biennale of Graphic Design, Moscow, Russia, 2018) | “Turn A Light On” (Escucha mi Voz, International Poster Contest, Guadalajara, Mexico, 2018) | Ecuador Poster Biennial (Ecuador, 2016) | "Poster for tomorrow: Work Right!" (Paris, France, 2014) | "Poster for tomorrow: Right of Education!" (Paris, France, 2011). Major group exhibitions include "Soft Edge of the Blade," Frieze No.9 Cork St., London (2021); "Alternating Currents," Parallel Circuit, Tehran (2021); "Beauty", Cooper Hewitt Invitational Design Triennial, Smithsonian Design Museum, New York (2017). Homa Delvaray has been interviewed, and her work has been the subject of articles in numerous publications.

     

    • Homa Delvaray Pickaxe From Kha Sh Series 2022 Steel Wood Fabric Leather Felt Woolen Pvc Silk Screen Print Digital Print Embroidery Ball Screws And Patchwork 350 X 160 X 60 Cm Detail New 5 Copy
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    • Homa Delvaray Pickaxe From Kha Sh Series 2022 Steel Wood Fabric Leather Felt Woolen Pvc Silk Screen Print Digital Print Embroidery Ball Screws And Patchwork 350 X 160 X 60 Cm Detail New 2 Copy
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  • Sepand Danesh , Overview

    Sepand Danesh

    Overview
    Sepand Danesh (b. 1984, Tehran, Iran) is a graduate of École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where he studied under the supervision of Giuseppe Penone and Philippe Cognée. 
    Works of Sepand Danesh stand at the crossroads of art and technology. He looks at the world through a pixelated filter – elements and figures in his paintings are made of squares/cubes in an Euclidian geometry of surfaces. These paintings start in the corner of a space with no ceiling or floor. A vertical shelf where various elements and figures make a show is suspended between perpendicular lines. He uses drawing, painting, and workshops to burst ideas about the dynamic of the Hub. His paintings represent the optical illusion of an inside corner (as the metaphor of impediment) without a floor or ceiling, which shelters his intimate and the world's broader memory.
    His work has been exhibited worldwide, including in the USA, Belgium, Dubai, Iran, and Morocco. It has entered prestigious collections such as the Fonds National d'Art Contemporain, FRAC Poitou Charentes, Collection Société Générale, and Fondation Colas. He regularly participates in residencies and performances, including the Mac/Val, featuring his work on multiple occasions. Some of his recent exhibitions include: "Summer Mix Vol. 1" (Tuesday to Friday, Valencia, 2023) | “In the Land of the Blind, the One-Eyed Man Is Roy" (Art Porters Gallery, Singapore, 2023) | "A Universe at the Corner" (Form For Future, Seoul, 2023) | “Fear of Collapse" (Praz Delavallade, Los Angeles, 2022) | “Introduction to The Hub" (Dastan’s Basement Gallery, Tehran, 2019).
     
    • Sepand Danesh, "Johnny Depp" from the Army of Blind series, 2023
      Sepand Danesh, "Johnny Depp" from the Army of Blind series, 2023
    • Sepand Danesh, “Ferdowsi and the Parietal Eye” from the Army of Blind series, 2023
      Sepand Danesh, “Ferdowsi and the Parietal Eye” from the Army of Blind series, 2023
  • Sepand Danesh

    Installation Views
    Installation View of Sepand Danesh's Introduction to the Hub in Dastan's Basement, 2019 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation View of Sepand Danesh's Introduction to the Hub in Dastan's Basement, 2019 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation View of Sepand Danesh's Introduction to the Hub in Dastan's Basement, 2019 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view of Dastan's Presentation of Asal Peirovi, Sepand Danesh & Mehdi Ghadyanloo in ART021, 2020  Photo by Jam Wang (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

     Installation View of Sepand Danesh's Introduction to the Hub in Dastan's Basement, 2019

  • Mehdi Ghadyanloo , Overview

    Mehdi Ghadyanloo

    Overview

    Mehdi Ghadyanloo (b. 1981, Karaj, Iran) received his BA from the University of Tehran (2005) and his MA in Film Studies from Tarbiyat-e Modarres College. Known primarily for his gigantic trompe l'oeil-style murals in central Tehran, Ghadyanloo has worked with various media, including printmaking, sculpture, and paintings with surreal and minimalistic themes. He currently lives and works in Frankfurt.

    Through his works, Ghadyanloo opens a window to life, one informed by his personal experience, portraying the landscapes of his youth, growing up around the agricultural fields on the outskirts of Tehran, his memories of Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), and his living experience as a public artist. Although sometimes somber and even suggestive of a failed utopia, Ghadyanloo's work is about imagining a different landscape within the current state of affairs of what remains glorious in gloomy times.

    Answering an open call from the Municipality of Tehran, he painted over 100 gigantic murals between 2004 and 2011. In 2016 he became the first Iranian artist since the Revolution of 1979 to be commissioned to complete a massive mural for the Rose Kennedy Greenway Project in Boston, US.

  • Mehdi Ghadyanloo

    Installation Views
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  • Hoda Kashiha, Overview

    Hoda Kashiha

    Overview
    Hoda Kashiha (b. 1986, Tehran, Iran) is a graduate of Painting from the University of Tehran (BA, 2009) and Boston University (MFA, 2014). She works and lives in Tehran.

    Works of Hoda Kashiha bounce between everyday life and the imagery she sets out to produce artworks. The artist meets with difficult moments of her personal and political life through non-linear narrative, dark humor, and mythological, religious, and modern icons. She composes her fragmented narratives by drawing from various references – "from Malevich to Instagram.” Kashiha uses digital tools to draw work and then construct it on canvas, layer upon layer. Nevertheless, this way of fragmenting motifs deals with major contemporary subjects such as persisting gender relations. The body plays a vital role in many of the artist’s works. Through the body, she relates to the world, becomes aware of her desires, and constructs an identity. She projects her personal life and the external world by drawing the body. Being interested in man and woman interaction, she uses various tools (airbrush, i-Pad, stencil) and subjects (body fragments, geometric abstraction) that affect an ambiguity that separates traditional definitions of male-female, resulting in gender fluidity.

    Hoda Kashiha solo exhibitions: "I'm Here, I'm not Here" (Passerelle Centre d’art contemporain, Brest, France, 2022) | "In Appreciation of Blinking", Parallel Circuit, Tehran (2021) | ˝Dear St. Agatha I am witness of your tears in the land of tulips˝ (Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Brussels, 2020) | ˝Crashed into The Sun˝ (Etemad Gallery, Tehran, 2018) | ˝I Scream Louder Than You˝ (Commonwealth Gallery, Boston, MA, 2014). Hoda Kashiha group participations: "Soft Edge of the Blade" (Frieze Cork Street, London, 2022) | FIAC (Paris, 2021) | "City Prince/sses" (Palais De Tokyo, Paris, 2019) | "The Oil of Pardis", (Balice Hertling Gallery, Paris, 2018) | "Human Condition" (Los Angeles Metropolitan Medical Center, Los Angeles, 2016) | "New Narrative" (Storefront Ten Eyck, Brooklyn, NY, 2015) | New Talent (Alpha Gallery, Boston, MA, 2014) | "Oppositional Realities" (Emerson College Gallery, Boston, MA, 2014) | Sherman Gallery (Boston, MA, 2013) | Boston Young Contemporaries (808 Gallery, Boston, MA, 2013) | "Big Red Shindig" (Mills Gallery, Boston, 2013). She received the Esther B. and Albert S. Kahn Award | Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center Rare Book Prize | Iranian Association of Boston Scholarship | Boston University Women’s Council Scholarship. She was a fellow at MacDowell Colony, Virginia Center for Creative Arts, and received the Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant at Vermont Studio Center. 

  • "While I am here, I am not here"

    Video courtesy of the Artist and Dastan Gallery 

    Video by Alborz Kazemi

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  • Ardeshir Mohassess , Overview

    Ardeshir Mohassess

    Overview
    Ardeshir Mohassess (Rasht, 1938-2008) was a prolific, influential, and internationally renowned Iranian artist. Born in the Caspian city of Rasht, Ardeshir Mohassess belonged to an educated and influential family. Although he was a top candidate for the School of Fine Arts, he studied Political Science and Law at the University of Tehran. He was a librarian while publishing political drawings in Iranian newspapers.

    Ardeshir Mohassess is known for his critical and humorous approach to his subject matter. His cartoons incorporated elements from the media, photography, film, Qajar-era lithography, and coffeehouse paintings. Using colored pencils, watercolor, and oil paints, he created both professional and amateurish works, employing pen and ink in many of his works. His work bridges the gap between traditional and modern Iranian art. He has influenced many Iranian cartoonists and illustrators, making it possible to refer to the tradition of drawing and figurative painting in Iran with him. His career spanned over half a century, with decisive turns in Iran’s socio-political environment.

    Best known for his drawings, his cartoons and illustrations have appeared in various publications, including Keyhan-e Hafteh (Weekly Book), Tamasha (Watch), and Tehran Journal. As Mohassess's talent gained recognition, his drawings were featured in international publications such as "Jeune Afrique," "The New York Times," and "The Nation." Works of Ardeshir Mohassess have been shown in notable venues such as the Musée d’Art Moderne, Paris, and the Asia Society, New York. They have been acquired by prestigious collections such as the Library of Congress and the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, and they have adorned the pages of more than ten books. 

     

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  • Farrokh Mahdavi, Overview

    Farrokh Mahdavi

    Overview
    Farrokh Mahdavi (b. 1970, Tehran, Iran) taught himself painting before studying with master painters and cultivating his passion for the medium. He lives and works in Tehran.

    Canvases of Farrokh Mahdavi can be distinguished through a unique pinkish hue. His technique aims to defamiliarize the well-known facial elements in a face. The fleshy-pink color of the artist's figures allows the rendering of "a more general depiction of human beings devoid of stereotypes of gender and race". The faces in Mahdavi’s work are reduced to features like the eyes or the lips, and the rest are covered by thick layers of pink paint, hinting at the emotional world of his characters. He tries to specify forms and conditions without directly depicting anything additional, as he believes it deviates from the main point. 

    Farrokh Mahdavi exhibitions: Frieze Cork Street (London, 2022) | FIAC (Paris, 2021) | "Seemingly Playful" (Yavuz Gallery, Sydney, Australia, 2021) | "The Shaving" (Electic Room, Tehran, 2017) | "The Big Shave" (Dastan's Basement, Tehran, 2016) | "City Prince/sses" (Palais de Tokyo, Paris, 2019) | the 56th Venice Biennale (2015). His work will also be a part of the National Gallery Victoria Triennial in December 2023.

  • "The Ground"

    Courtesy of the Artist and Dastan Gallery

    Video Credit: Alborz Kazemi

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  • Nicky Nodjoumi, With the Cold Hand, 2023
    Artworks

    Nicky Nodjoumi

    Overview
    Nicky Nodjoumi (b. 1942, Kermanshah, Iran),  is an Iranian-born American painter. He honed his artistic skills and gained recognition in his homeland before relocating to New York. Born in Kermanshah, he initially imitated Russian painters during his youth but later shifted focus to landscape painting following a friend's suggestion. After completing high school, he moved to Tehran to pursue a degree in painting at the Faculty of Fine Arts. He studied at the Faculty of Fine Art of the University of Tehran and currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

    Nicky Nodjoumi, known for his large-scale figurative oil canvases, skillfully combines historical and phantasmagorical imagery with sharp political commentaries. His compositions are straightforward, precise, and expressive, often featuring disintegrated portraits, disguised faces, clowns, and animals. Using storytelling, he piles bodies and body parts irreverently, challenging the connection between art and politics. Nodjoumi's works, influenced by social and political incidents, evoke a sense of fragmented narratives and the absurdity of power. His art has gained a significant following in Iran and internationally, reflecting his enduring critical approach over six decades of artistic activity.

    Nodjoumi's works have been exhibited in various galleries and museums and held in collections worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the British Museum in London, the DePaul Art Museum in Chicago, and the National Museum of Cuba. His recent solo shows include:"Reawakening 1995" at Sahar K Boluki Fine Art Gallery (Toronto, 2023) | "Tails of the Lost Dreams" at Taymour Grahne Projects (London, 2022) | “We The Witnesses" at Helena Anrather (New York, 2021). Group show: "Antifragile Human" at Negah Gallery (Tehran, 2023) | "Treasure 3" at Liam Gallery (Tehran, 2023) | "Lotfi X Mashahir Cross 3" at Guye Art Gallery (Tehran, 2023) | "Contemporary Exhibition" at Hasht Cheshmeh Art Space (Kashan, Iran, 2023) | "Ten Days Like Flower" at Choom Gallery (Bandar-e Anzali, Iran, 2023) | "Resize"at Artibition Gallery (Tehran, 2023) | "5 Titans of Iranian Modern Art" at Sahar K Boluki Fine Art Gallery (Toronto, 2022) | "Process" at H Art Gallery (Tehran, 2022) | "A Selection of Modern Works from The Laal Collection" at O Gallery (Tehran, 2022) | "Opportunity" at Iranian Artist Forum (Tehran, 2022) | "Soft Edge of the Blade" at Dastan Outside Projects (London, 2022) | "Stellar Artists" at Sahar K Boluki Fine Art Gallery (Toronto, 2021) | "Dancing Where the Dreams Live" at The Bridge and Tunnel (Brooklyn, 2021) | "Artists' Emergency Aid: Part 3" at Mohsen Gallery (Tehran, 2021) | "Collector 8" at Artibition, (Tehran, 2021) | "Showroom No 1" at The Bridge and Tunnel (Brooklyn, 2021) | "Birds" at Soo Contemporary (Tehran, 2021) | "A Boundless Drop to a Boundless Ocean" at Orlando Museum of Art (Orlando, 2021) | "Sanctuary" at Azad Art Gallery (Tehran, 2021) | "One by One" at Azad Art Gallery (Tehran, 2020). Art Fair: Contemporary Istanbul, represented by Roya Khadjavi Projects (Istanbul, 2022) | Asia Now, represented by Plus 2 (Paris, 2021)

    • Nicky Nodjoumi, With the Cold Hand, 2023
      Nicky Nodjoumi, With the Cold Hand, 2023
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    • Nicky Nodjoumi, The Wight Hand
      Nicky Nodjoumi, The Wight Hand
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  • Asal Peirovi , Overview

    Asal Peirovi

    Overview
    Asal Peirovi (b. 1985, Sari, Mazandaran Province, Iran) is a graduate of Painting from Shahed University (BA, 2009) and Tehran Art University (MA, 2014). 

    In her work, Asal Peirovi uses various techniques and focuses on themes such as memory, travel, scenography, architecture, and nature. Her signature is the distinct handling of materials and experimentations with architectural elements inside the logic of perspective. Another trademark in her works is that she often works on unprimed and unstretched canvases. The paintings of Asal Peirovi are a combination of study and improvisation in which the artist’s creation of visual texture on fabric resembles the unpredictable behavior of nature. This allows her to use it as a context to add different layers of architectural elements opposing nature’s unpredictability. These architectural elements, inspired by Perso-Islamic historic structures, are depicted in the color palette and the perspective techniques of traditional Persian painting, invoking many elusive references that express the diversity that informs Asal Peirovi’s visual perception.

    Asal Peirovi's work has been featured in many solo exhibitions and group shows. Her solo Exhibitions include: "Passing Through Alborz Range in 3’20” (Chapter, New York, 2021) | "Curtains II" (Standard (Oslo), Oslo, 2019)| "Curtains" (Dastan’s Basement, Tehran, 2018)| "Travelogue’" (Dastan’s Basement, Tehran, 2016)| Shahla’s Bridge (Shirin Art Gallery, Tehran, 2014) and her group exhibitions include "The Future" (Presented by Gagosian Gallery and Jeffrey Deitch, Paris, 2020)| "Ups & Downs" (Standard (Oslo). Oslo, 2020)| Update 5.0 (V-Gallery. Dastan:Outside. Tehran, 2017)| "Insomnia" (Assar Art Gallery. Tehran, 2016); "Zoo" (Shirin Art Gallery. Tehran, 2015)| "Happening Moment" (Sari Art Gallery. Sari, Iran, 2015)|"Infinity" (Seyhoun Gallery. Tehran, 2012)| Drawing Exhibition (Shirin Art Gallery. Tehran, 2010)| Drawing Exhibition (Mohsen Gallery. Tehran, 2009)| The 2nd Montakhabe-e Nasl-e No Exhibition (Homa Art Gallery, Tehran, 2007)| Painters from Mazandaran (Saba Cultural Center. Tehran, 2007).
    Her works have been included in Art Fairs, including| "ART021" (Trio with Sepand Danesh, Mehdi Ghadynaloo, Shanghai, China, 2021)| Art Basel (Online, Represented by Standard (Oslo), Basel, 2020)| Independent Art Fair (Represented by Standard (Oslo). Basel, 2020)| Art Basel (Represented by Standard (Oslo), Basel, 2019).

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  • 2018. Asal Peirovi. Curtains. Dastan's Basement. Installation View  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2021. Asal Peirovi. Chapter NY. Installation View  Courtesy of the Artist and Chapter Gallery  Photo by Charles Benton (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2021. Asal Peirovi, Farrokh Mahdavi. hoda Zarbaf and Mehdi Ghadyanloo. Seemingly Playful. Yavuz Gallery. Sydney. Installation View  Courtesy of the Artist and Yavuz Gallery (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2019. Asal Peirovi. Curtains II. Standard (Oslo). Installation View  Courtesy of the Artist and Standard Gallery (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2019. Asal Peirovi. Curtains II. Standard (Oslo). Installation View  Courtesy of the Artist and Standard Gallery (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2020. Asal Peirovi, Sepand Danesh & Mehdi Ghadyanloo. ART021 2020. Installation View  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery  by Jam Wang (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Installation view of Curtains at Dastan's Basement

  • Reza Shafahi, Overview

    Reza Shafahi

    Overview
    Reza Shafahi (b. 1940, Saveh, Iran) is a painter who works and lives in Tehran. He began his artistic career in his 70s after overcoming a gambling addiction with the encouragement of his artist son, Mamali Shafahi. Disconnected from his family for many years, he found solace and creative redemption through art when his son invited him to participate in a daily drawing exercise. His art reflects personal experiences and emotions, showcasing a unique style characterized by vibrant colors, bold brushwork, and expressive compositions. Reza Shafahi's story is a testament to art’s transformative power and the human spirit’s resilience. Reza Shafahi is based in Tehran, Iran. His iconic work has been included in numerous shows, including most recently in "Some Seasons: Fereydoun Ave and the Laal Collection", (Art Jameel, Dubai, UAE, 2023) and "Soft Edge of the Blade Vol. 2", (Zaal Art Gallery, Toronto, Canada, 2023).
    • Reza Shafahi, Untitled, 2021
      Reza Shafahi, Untitled, 2021
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    • Reza Shafahi, Untitled, 2021
      Reza Shafahi, Untitled, 2021
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    • Reza Shafahi, Untitled, 2021
      Reza Shafahi, Untitled, 2021
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    • Reza Shafahi, Untitled, 2021
      Reza Shafahi, Untitled, 2021
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  • Mamali Shafahi, Overview
    Portrait of Mamali Shafahi by Florian Hetz

    Mamali Shafahi

    Overview

    Mamali Shafahi (b. 1982, Tehran), graduated with a BA in Photography from Tehran University of Art (2002) and studied at ENSAPC (École Nationale Supérieure d'Arts Paris). He is a filmmaker and video installation artist. ​​His practice, varying from installation to sculpture and film, includes a deep fascination with the impact of emerging technologies on life and art. His early work in France, at the Paris-Cergy School of Fine Arts, focused on performance. He then produced a number of video installations, in which he investigated the relationship between past, present, future, and new technologies. Mamali is based in Amsterdam and Paris, and his work is regularly exhibited in international institutions and galleries, including most recently,  his solo "Phantasmagoria: Daddy Kills More People",  at The Breeder Gallery, Athens, 2023 and the group exhibition "Some Seasons: Fereydoun Ave and the Laal Collection", Art Jameel, Dubai, 2023.

  • Mamali Shafahi, Embrace 01, 2023
    Artworks

    Mamali Shafahi

    Embrace 01, 2023
    Flocked epoxy
    60 x 40 x 10 cm
    23 1/2 x 16 x 4 in
  • 1400 2022 Mamali Shafahi Judgment Night Daddy Kills People Parallel Circuit Installation View Lowres 15 Mamali Shafahi15 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    1400 2022 Mamali Shafahi Judgment Night Daddy Kills People Parallel Circuit Installation View Lowres 14 Mamali Shafahi14 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    1400 2022 Mamali Shafahi Judgment Night Daddy Kills People Parallel Circuit Installation View Lowres 02 Mamali Shafahi2 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Frieze La 2023 1401 Peybak And Mamali Shafahi Dastan Gallery Art Fair Installation View Lowres 08 8 Frize La 23 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Frieze La 2023 1401 Peybak And Mamali Shafahi Dastan Gallery Art Fair Installation View Lowres 13 13 Frize La 23 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Frieze La 2023 1401 Peybak And Mamali Shafahi Dastan Gallery Art Fair Installation View Lowres 02 2 Frize La 23 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    1400 2021 Mamali Shafahi Liste 2021 Installation View Photo By Studio Shapiro Courtesy Of Dastan Gallery And The Artist 3 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    1400 2021 Mamali Shafahi Liste 2021 Installation View Photo By Studio Shapiro Courtesy Of Dastan Gallery And The Artist 1 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    1400 2022 Mamali Shafahi Judgment Night Daddy Kills People Parallel Circuit Installation View Lowres 15 Mamali Shafahi15
  • Behjat Sadr, Overview

    Behjat Sadr

    Overview

    Behjat Sadr known (1924, Arak, Iran – 2009, Corsica, France) known as Behjat Sadr Mahallāti is among the first female artists and university lecturers of Iran. She graduated in Painting from the University of Tehran (1954). She was an active presence in the international visual art scene beginning in the 1960s. Having studied in Italy, she became interested in abstraction and created her first series of works between 1961 and 1966.

    Sadr is known for using a palette knife on canvases that create impressionistic visual rhythm, movement and geometric shapes. Black dominates a major part of her work. She uses blotches to create dynamic patterns. By placing paint directly on the surface of the work and removing paint with a knife countless times, she arrives at the familiar visual structure of her paintings. Sadr was also a photographer and known for her collages.

    Sadr was a participant at 31st Venice Biennale in 1962. Her works are part of many museum collections, like Tate London; Minneapolis; Pompidou in Paris.

    • Behjat Sadr Part a series of geometric works from 1977

      Behjat Sadr

      Part a series of geometric works from 1977

       

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  • Behjat Sadr | Installation Views

    2023. Group Presentation. Frieze New York. Dastan Gallery. Art Fair. Installation Views  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2023. Group Presentation. Frieze New York. Dastan Gallery. Art Fair. Installation Views  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view of The Armory Show 2023 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Installation View of  Frieze New York 2023

  • Mohsen Vaziri Moghadam, Overview

    Mohsen Vaziri Moghadam

    Overview

    Mohsen Vaziri Moghaddam (1924 – 2018) is acknowledged as a pioneer of Iranian abstractionism and a leading figure in developing contemporary Iranian art. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Rome. He was also an educator, opening the way for many to-be artists to go beyond the limits of established practices. His "Drawing Method and Painting Guide" (1981) is today’s standard academic text.

    He is widely recognized for works spanning five decades, from the painterly abstracts of the 1960s to the hard-edged geometry of the sculpted and painted aluminum wall reliefs of his later years. Vaziri’s work is characterized by a restless experimentation of form through materials -- deployed in his drawings, sand paintings, opto-kinetic sculptures, and painted aluminum wall reliefs.

    During his lifetime, Vaziri was the subject of numerous exhibitions internationally, exhibited extensively at the Venice Biennial, and was collected by MoMA (NY).

  • Mohsen Vaziri Moghaddam, Untitled from "Fear & Flight" Series, 1986 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Mohsen Vaziri Moghaddam, Untitled from "Fear & Flight" Series, 1986
  • Pejman Foundation - Mohsen Vaziri Moghaddam: Unrealised Projects, 26 November 2021 - 11 February 2022

    Pejman Foundation - Mohsen Vaziri Moghaddam: Unrealised Projects

    26 November 2021 - 11 February 2022
    “I would like to see these desert sculptures in very large dimensions on the desert hills, next to the villages and in the squares of the cities of Iran. I would also love to give small samples to the students to create a sense of creativity and shape. This, however, requires things that are beyond my control”.
    These are the artist’s almost prophetic words when, in 1975, he wrote the introduction to the catalogue of his retrospective at the Takhte Jamshid Gallery in Tehran.
    On that occasion, his well-known artworks from the “Sand” series and interactive, mobile sculptures from the early 1970s were exhibited as well as new plexiglass sculptures entitled ‘Pardiss’, whose first example is kept at TMoCA (Museum of Contemporary Art) in Tehran.
    The exhibition itinerary develops in a continuous dialogue between historical sculptures and new reproductions, creating a continuous dance in time and space thanks to the visitors’ interaction, allowing them to enter Mohsen Vaziri’s universe.
    Thanks to a long-term vision and études for sculptures that were kept for over 50 years, today the artist allows us —through his pencil sketches— to feel the power and determination of his will to build these artworks.
    The opportunity will come only in 1979 when a government counsellor commissions Vaziri with a ‘Pardiss’ for Jamshidieh Park in Tehran—a project that will be brought to life in Kent (England) but that unfortunately will never arrive to its final destination due to the events of those years.
    Today, through collaboration between Pejman Foundation and Vaziri Moghaddam Foundation, we make this dream possible with the installation of the same work chosen in that distant 1979 for Tehran’s park in Argo Factory’s courtyard.
     

    Hamoun Vaziri Moghaddam

  • Iman Raad

    Iman Raad

    Iman Raad (b. 1979, Mashhad, Iran) lives and works in New York City. He holds an MFA in Painting and Printmaking from Yale University and a BE in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Sistan and Baluchestan. He is currently a resident at the Queens Museum Studio Program and an adjunct faculty at The Cooper Union School of Art. Raad works across a variety of media, including painting, drawing, embroidery, graphic design, and performance lectures. In these diverse works, he draws on influences such as Persian painting, Mughal painting, South-Asian Truck painting. He combines these local references with digital image culture and contemporary subject matter to create his work that ranges from small reverse paintings on glass to mural-scale wall installations. Using a vivid, high key palette, altered perspective, and repetition that mimics digital glitches, results in a riot of color and movement. Traditionally ornamental elements such as birds and flowers and still life subject matters such as fruits and candles are recalibrated into subjects that carry narrative import and are given animate, unnatural presences. These are intertwined with social events and historical moments rendered in fantastical ways to draw in the viewer. Raad's work has been featured in several books including The Phaidon archive of five hundred designs that matter and reviewed in media including The New York Times and Frieze Magazine. Recent exhibitions include the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (MOCAD), the Flag Art Foundation, New York, Centro Cultural La Moneda, Santiago, Chile, the 9th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art (APT9), Brisbane, Australia, and solo shows at Sargent's Daughters Gallery, New York, and Dastan Gallery, Tehran, Iran. Public collections include The British Museum, The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), the Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art (QAGOMA), the Allentown Art Museum, Lafayette College Art Collection, Les Arts Décoratifs, Ogaki poster Museum, Zurich Poster Collection, and The Iranian Museum of Graphic Design.

     
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  • Peybak, Overview
    Portrait of the Artist

    Peybak

    Overview

    Peybak‭ (‬Peyman Barabadi and Babak Alebrahim Dehkordi‭, ‬both b‭. ‬1984‭, ‬Tehran‭, ‬Iran‭) ‬is the acronym of two artists who have been working together as a‭ "‬unified duo‭" ‬since December 20‭, ‬2001‭. ‬Peybak is mostly well-known for depicting imaginative creatures in a‭ ‬dystopian reverse void‭.‬‮ ‬The duo work on every piece together‭, ‬each taking on different parts until they both declare it finished‭. ‬Peybak's works are inspired by Persian poetry‭, ‬mythology‭, ‬and miniature painting‭.‬

    Peybak solo shows with Dastan Gallery: "Xa La" ( +2 Gallery, 2021) | "Zahouk" (Dastan's Basement, 2018) | "Abrakan Éclat" (Galerie GP & N Vallois, Paris, France, 2017) | "Abrakan" (+2 Gallery, 2017) | "Abrakan (Naissance)" (Dastan’s Basement, 2016) | "Abrakan (Naissance)" (Galerie GP & N Vallois, 2015) | "Abrakan's Room" (Dastan's Basement, 2015). Peybak group shows: "Jungle Fever" (Galerie GP & N Vallois. 33 rue de Seine. Paris, 2019) | "Tu dois changer ta vie !." (Tri Postal, Lille, France, 2015) | "Year in Review" (A Dastan:Outside Project. Sam Art. Tehran, 2015) | "Monster’s Room" (Bleu Brut, Domaine Vranken Pommery, Reims, France, 2014) | "The Mine" (Dubai, UAE, 2014) | "Must Be Destroyed" (Sin Gallery, Tehran, 2013). Peybak has participated in the following art fairs: "Mossavar-Nameh" (Art Dubai. Dastan's Basement Booth. Dubai, 2018) | Sydney Contemporary (Dastan's Basement Booth, Sydney, 2017) | "The Sun Rises from the West" (Art Dubai, Dastan’s Basement Booth, 2016) | The Armory Show (Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois Booth, New York, 2016) | FIAC (Grand Palais, Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois Booth, Paris, 2016) | Abu Dhabi Art Fair (Abu Dhabi, 2015) | Contemporary Istanbul (Istanbul, 2015) | FIAC (Grand Palais, Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois. Paris, 2015).

    • Peybak, Abrakan 16, 2022
      Peybak, Abrakan 16, 2022
    • Peybak, Abrakan 15, 2022
      Peybak, Abrakan 15, 2022
    • Peybak, Abrakan 04, 2022
      Peybak, Abrakan 04, 2022
    • Peybak, Abrakan 07, 2022
      Peybak, Abrakan 07, 2022
  • Mohammad Hossein Gholamzadeh, Drowning, 2023
    Artworks

    Mohammad Hossein Gholamzadeh

    Drowning, 2023
    Mohammad Hossein Gholamzadeh (b. 1986, Tehran, Iran) holds a BFA in Sculpture.
    Along with a desire for technical perfections in art creation, he has always been interested in the paradoxical nature of the relationships between objects and their usages. Using the same perspective, he has introduced other elements into his work to create a contemporary context for showing both the differences and similarities between historical and contemporary events. Most of Gholamzadeh's sculptures are figurative works possessing different objects and clothing. These elements often contain allusions to history, traits, lifestyles and ideas.
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  • Mehrdad Mohebali, Singles Picnic, 2022
    Artworks

    Mehrdad Mohebali

    Overview

    Mehrdad Mohebali (b. 1960, Tehran, Iran) is a Tehran-based artist. He graduated in Painting from the University of Tehran.

    In works of Mehrdad Mohebali, usually done in large formats, people are excuted in a manneristic fashion. His early surreal scenes gave way to portraits of familiar political figures and scenes from art history next to those of the painter and ordinary people. His use of intense colors, lighting, and the poses of his subjects imbues his works with affectations and distortions.

    His work has been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions in Iran and internationally; including at the Lajevardi Foundation in Tehran (2016), the 2015 Venice Biennale, the Salsali Private Museum in Dubai (2012), the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art (2004 and 2001), and the Tokyo Museum of Contemporary Art (2002).

  • "Encounter" 

    Courtesy of the Artist and Dastan Gallery 

    Video by Alborz Kazemi

  • 2021. Mehrdad Mohebali. We Danced. +2. Installation Views  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery  Photo by Matin Jameie (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2021. Mehrdad Mohebali. We Danced. +2. Installation Views  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery  Photo by Matin Jameie (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2021. Mehrdad Mohebali. We Danced. +2. Installation Views  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery  Photo by Matin Jameie (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2019. ART021. Reza Aramesh and Mehrdad Mohebali. Installation Views  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    2019. ART021. Reza Aramesh and Mehrdad Mohebali. Installation Views  Courtesy of Dastan Gallery (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Installation View of We Danced at +2

  • Ali Akbar Sadeghi, Holy Demon |||, 2023
    Artworks

    Ali Akbar Sadeghi

    Holy Demon |||, 2023
    Ali-Akbar Sadeghi (b. 1937, Tehran) is a renown visual artist who started painting at an early age. He graduated with a BA from the College of Fine Arts of the University of Tehran in 1969. He worked as a graphic designer (posters, book covers, packaging) for many years before joining the Center for the Intellectual Development of Child and Adolescent (CIDCA) in 1971. CIDCA was a thriving center for creative work and Sadeghi directed his attention to making animations and illustrating books.
    Inspired by the folk culture of Iran, Ali-Akbar Sadeghi's spirited canvases and illustrations are where modern and ancient aesthetics coincide. There is no ground or figure in his paintings but theaters of interaction. Seldom do we find empty spaces. Something is happening in every pixel of his canvases. This level of saturation turns painting into space.
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  • 1401 2022 Ali Akbar Sadeghi Mad Parallel Circuit Installation View Lowres 06 Ali Akbar Sadeghi6 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    1401 2022 Ali Akbar Sadeghi Mad Parallel Circuit Installation View Lowres 02 Ali Akbar Sadeghi2 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
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    1401 2022 Ali Akbar Sadeghi Mad Parallel Circuit Installation View Lowres 17 Ali Akbar Sadeghi17 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
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    1401 2022 Ali Akbar Sadeghi Mad Parallel Circuit Installation View Lowres 06 Ali Akbar Sadeghi6
  • Farah Ossouli, 1953 Zanjan, Iran

    Farah Ossouli

    1953 Zanjan, Iran
    Farah Ossouli (b. 1953, Zanjan, Iran) has achieved a unique fusion of techniques, materials, themes, and narrations during her forty-year career as an artist. She has been a pioneer in introducing contemporary themes and ideas into miniature painting. Her works have been presented in numerous solo and group exhibitions in Iran and abroad and are held at major public collections including Los Angeles County Museum of Art; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Devi Art Foundation, New Delhi; Tropen Museum, Amsterdam; Ludwig Museum, Koblenz, Germany, and Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, Tehran, Iran.
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