Iranโs photo history reflects the contradictions of a society where deep tensions exist between traditional and contemporary culture, between urban and rural tradition.
Updated Jan 2024
However, when we collect some of its most important images, the country reveals itself as a proud and rebellious nation, free from the shackles of regimes and external oppressors.
1. Shadi Ghadirian โ Untitled from Qajar, Iran, 2015
Inspired by photos from the Qajar period of Iran, Shadi Ghadirianโs portrait shots of contemporary Iranian women dressed in 19th-century clothes imitate the traditional style of the era but incorporate references to modern society in an attempt to show the dispute between tradition and modernity in a globalized world.
The stylization and sepia tones of the staged portraits are almost identical to the classic photos of the day but are supplemented by references to the present day. In perhaps the most famous of the series, a veiled woman holds a boombox on her shoulder, questioning how times have changed, the roles of women in society and whether much has changed for women or not.
2. Abbas Kowsari โ Azadi Stadium, Tehran โ from the series โMasculinityโ, 2006
Abbas Kowasari addresses Iranian societyโs relationship with the body. The bodybuilders of his photos are both impressive and uncharacteristic of the worldโs idea of Iran.
The physical prowess of the well-oiled bodies which inhabit Kowasariโs photos also hold a homoerotic quality not frequently seen art. Homosexuality is a crime in Iran and therefore Kowasariโs photos address male sexuality in an arena in which it is acceptable- here, sport.
3. Henry Clarke โ Isfahan, Iran, 1969
In 1969 Henry Clarke was commissioned by Vogue to shoot a spread for the magazine at historic locations around Iran. Clarke captured Western female models against the walls of old buildings including mosques and palaces in Tehran, Isfahan, Shiraz, and Persepolis. Clarkeโs photos eroticize Iran and conjure a sense of the colonial era.
Today these photos of holy sites with women revealing their hair would not be allowed to be taken so they are a unique relic of pre-revolutionary Iran.
4. Reza Bagheri โ โPeaceโ. Bafgh Desert, Yazd Province.
This stunning image was selected as the first prize winner of our 2019 Landscape Photography Award, by judge Chris Burkard, and depicts Iranโs Bafgh Desert, renowned for its beautiful undulating dunes, which photographer Reza Bagheri has captured perfectly. The clean, smooth lines of the dunes lead the viewerโs eye to the distance, where they gradually give way to a dry plain, whilst further still, rugged desert peaks emerge, silhouetted against the backdrop of a breathtaking setting sky.
5. Shirin Neshat โ Women of Allah, Iran, 2014
Neshatโs work explores the relationship between women and the religious and cultural value systems of Islam. Her overtly political photos address Islamic lawโs effect on Iranian womenโs daily life. In her series The Women of Allah, she presents herself in a series of self-portraits wearing the chador veil. In the photographs, her face, feet, and hands (the only parts of the body allowed to be shown by Islamic law) are covered in Iranian poetry by Forough Farrokhzad and Tahereh Saffarzadeh. By mixing poetry and writing Neshat makes the statement that these women are more than icons of oppression, they are complex individuals with desires and ambitions.
6. Azadeh Akhlaghi โ Faculty of Engineering, Tehran University, Iran
These staged photographs reproduce notorious death scenes throughout Iranian history, reinventing the idea of what it is to be an eyewitness. Akhlahiโs series By An Eyewitness harks of a time before smartphones and compiles some of the bloodiest and most famous national deaths of the twentieth century in Iran.
This panoramic tableau depicts the murder of Azar Shariat Razavi, Ahmad Ghandchi, and Mostafa Bozorgnia, three students murdered by police during student demonstrations against the visit of Richard Nixon in 1953. Akhlaghi freeze-frames staff and students as they run panic-stricken, down steps while bloodstained bodies lie in corridors surrounded by distraught friends. Iran still remembers the tragedy every year, on Student Day.
7. Amirmahdi Najafloo Shahpar โ โBenedictionโ.
This breathtaking image by Amirmahdi Najafloo Shahpar captures a group of Muslim women engaged in prayer during Eid al-Fitr (the last day of Ramadan) in the city of Hamedan. The photograph, taken from a slightly elevated, side angle, portrays thousands of devotees with their slightly bowed heads covered in often intricately patterned hijabs, forming a beautiful mosaic that conveys their profound sense of dedication.
8. Unknown Photographer โ News photo, 1967
Prior to the Iranian revolution, women were part of a fairly tolerant, or at least more socially relaxed liberal democracy. The revolution rolled back several advancements in feminist progress- the hijab was introduced, women were removed from cabinet positions, and the judiciary. Images from before the revolution show Iranian women clad in revealing and tight clothing much like the outfits worn by their contemporary peers in the West. These playful and colorful images show a completely different world to modern Iran in which modesty and tradition govern the land.
9. Gohar Dashti โ Untitled, from the Stateless series, 2014-15
Gohar Dashti has made the legacy of conflict the central theme of her work. Born in Ahvaz, a city in south-west Iran, on the border with Iraq, her home was essentially a battlefield in a brutal way between the neighboring states. Watching the place she called home reduced to rubble she has now chosen to root her practice in the physical and psychological aftermath of this tragedy.
Approaching the post-conflict history as a conceptual artist rather than a documentary photographer, she fabricated her pictures to locate the insecurity she recognized around her whilst growing up. Her staged photos juxtapose the expectations of โnormalโ life with the detritus of war. In her series Stateless, she created metaphors intended to express Iranโs ongoing trauma caused by the millions of lives lost and those millions more who were displaced due to future conflicts.
10. Farnaz Damnabi โ โPlaying is my right #2โณ 2018
This wonderful portrait, captured by Iranian photographer Farnaz Damnabi in a small village in the province of Golestan, tells a compelling story. In some Iranian villages, residents lack essential amenities like water and electricity, and according to the photographer, attention to childrenโs needs for entertainment is often insufficient. However, despite this intention to shed light on such circumstances, what Farnaz foundโand beautifully portrayed in the photoโwas the genuine happiness of children, even in the absence of proper facilities for amusement.
The young girlโs smiling face, set against the backdrop of broken swings and the rugged, arid landscape, creates a surreal image that is both heartwarming and melancholic, capturing the resilience and joy of children in the face of challenging circumstances
All images ยฉ their respective owners