Our Profile of an Artist section highlights dancers, painters, photographers, singers, musicians, writers et plus, who are not only based in Paris, but people from all over the world. We feel there should be no boundaries for art or artists, and hope you'll agree. Without further ado, please meet PM's featured artist for this month.
| Profile of an Artist: Shirin Neshat, Video Maker and Artist |
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| Written by Francis H. Powell | |||
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Iran was in the news last year, for political reasons. Some even saw
it as a country living in the shadow of war. I am presented with the
chance of seeing the work of an Iranian artist. There is quite a lot
of activity when I arrive at the Galerie Jerome de Noirmont. The work
mostly comprises of large scale photographs of people. What makes the
pieces different is the fact they also contain, in the background some
kind of writing in Iranian (I presume). At the end of the gallery
there is a line of people. I discover they are all waiting to go
upstairs to watch a video. My curiosity leads me to join the line and
in time I am ushered upstairs. I am not really sure what I am going to
see. Indeed I have same feeling a person who has who arrives at a
cinema late and the film has already started, you have to try to make
sense of what you have missed.
Francis H. Powell is originally from England and moved to Paris in 1999. In addition to being a writer (articles, songs and poems), he is a painter, DJ and English trainer. For more information, please click here to read his complete bio.
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Iran was in the news last year, for political reasons. Some even saw
it as a country living in the shadow of war. I am presented with the
chance of seeing the work of an Iranian artist. There is quite a lot
of activity when I arrive at the Galerie Jerome de Noirmont. The work
mostly comprises of large scale photographs of people. What makes the
pieces different is the fact they also contain, in the background some
kind of writing in Iranian (I presume). At the end of the gallery
there is a line of people. I discover they are all waiting to go
upstairs to watch a video. My curiosity leads me to join the line and
in time I am ushered upstairs. I am not really sure what I am going to
see. Indeed I have same feeling a person who has who arrives at a
cinema late and the film has already started, you have to try to make
sense of what you have missed.
The music for both films is ambient, with dark tones and I am impressed by it. Important to the first video is the image of a man and woman lying on the ground, their image shot from above. Poetic words accompany the images. The second video seems to me to be about a marriage that has gone terribly wrong. The film and music has a ghostlike quality. There are images of remote landscapes, a house left to decay. I think one of the delights of seeing short films such as these, is the deductions we have to make, to try to comprehend what we are watching and also the space that is left to use our own imagination, to fill in the gaps. A woman seems to be drifting around, a lost spirit, burdened by some terrible memory. She keeps referring to a dress she is going to wear to a wedding. Towards the end of the video we see her being pinned down by some men, maybe she was violated. The video has this hazy dreamlike quality. I realise having seen the videos, that the exhibition below are stills from the videos.
Neshat reflects her sense of displacement by trying to untangle the ideology of Islam through art . er large scale photographic images are beautifully produced and her videos have great qualities to them.









