Life in Tehran means several different things certainly, and I think in the West, it’s common to polarize the possible meanings based on obvious stereotypes and newswire-fueled assumptions. It’s easy that way. But in approaching this collection of modern art from Tehran, a complex intellectual tension surfaces as the artists are responding, surely, to an aggressively political and religious society but also attempting to reveal another richer layer in the story along with the symbols of alienation and fear.
In “One Day: A Collective Narrative of Tehran,” the surprising details of the mundane are explored, as one part of the story. I naturally go to politics to contextualize this, as if to say that this art is only symptomatic of the political climates; it’s not. But the questions now change to something like: well, is boredom a consequence of oppression? Is this a different type of oppression? In Ghazaleh Hedayat’s Taxiography, 2009, the artist maps out the hours spent in traffic and public transit. She drops her pen, using different colors to signify different roads and lets her hand relax and travel along the paper. This surrendering of control reminds me of the hypotrochoid art set I had as a kid, where you let your pen roll in a roulette through a stencil. The artist of course is not stenciling, but she is using the course of the road, with all its potholes and sudden traffic stops, as her guide. She seems interested in systems and in Process Art. The result is a series of realized and chaotic geographies, alike in abruptness and the capacity to puzzle. Is life really just as tedious over there?

Taraneh Hemami’s wool carpet Turning Green, 2009, is another map of dizzying geography. Tehran is the core where these convoluted tributaries meet. Like Byzantine conduits, these roads are seemingly unpredictable in every bend. The realization of another geography that’s not American, not San Franciscan, always makes me feel stupid. Yes, of course there is unfamiliar and unanticipated ground out there, I know this much. But I think it’s true that the actualization and physical mass of such a place (even through a wool carpet and its sheepy, burnt smell) is still effective and needed to reinforce that this is a real place, where real people do come from, where they inhabit.
And such a place, with all its political tension, does exist, where people have a story to tell. There’s Homayoun Askari Sirizi’s caged bird who in ancient times arbitrarily anointed kings and in modern days arbitrarily decides your fortune by picking from a choice of folded poems. The bird’s mythology is fabulous and glamorous, and so is its current career (or so you’d think for a bird of that responsibility), but the setting of the video is in a very everyday, urban city side. Cars pass. Building cast shadows. The bird tells you the meaning of life. And people go on living.
A white, vertical box stands, with breath coming from it. The holes drilled into the box represent martyrs. And people go on living. Political billboards are plastered on the sides of building or erected in public spaces. And people go on living. With so much work that needs to be commented on (and a conversation that can go deeper and deeper), I’m going to stop short at Neda Razavipour’s Find the Lost One, 2009, a video installation of a subway scene. The same video plays side by side but in one video, there’s a difference. One person has been erased. I stood, watching. I couldn’t find him or her. The artist was successful in the art of subtlety. Life’s tedium repeats, and the work is fairly literal, somber. Someone gets erased and it’s hard to tell whom; so people go on living. I guess they have to, they must. And after watching for some time, I never found the missing person.
- Jolene Torr
(All images courtesy the artist and Intersection: Taraneh Hemami, "Turning Green," 2009, Laser cut wool carpet, 126" x 108"; Mehran Mohajer, "Tehran, Undated," 2009, C-print, 27.25"H x 27.25"W; Abbas Kowsari. "The time is 24:00. This is Tehran.," 2009, C-print, triptych, each 14.5"H x 110"W)