
click to enlarge
4 June – 10
August 2008
Tate Britain, Level 2
Millbank, London
Admission free. Open daily 10.00-18.00, until 22.00 on the first Friday of the
month
In June 2008, Tate Britain will open the first major exhibition in the UK of the
work of the Iranian-British photographer and film director, Mitra Tabrizian.
Born in Tehran, Tabrizian's primary concerns are contemporary issues and debates
and her interests range from post-feminism and post-colonial theories and the
effects of late capitalism in Britain, to the shifting realities of life in
post-revolutionary Iran. Bringing together more than 17 works from the last
eight years, this exhibition will focus on themes of the rise of corporate
culture, ageism, nomadism, migrancy and notions of homeland.
Tabrizian's particular conceptual approach to constructed picture-making will
also be revealed. Combining documentary techniques with those of film to make
elaborate photographic tableaux, her photographs are carefully staged so that
the images operate as condensed narratives. Sometimes these narratives span a
sequence of stills, as in the series The Perfect Crime 2003-2004 and Lost Time
2004, while in other works such as Silent Majority the storyline is concentrated
within one frame. The themes of these works echo earlier pieces such as Beyond
the Limits 2000 in offering a challenging critique of corporate culture and
contemporary life.
In her most recent works, including Border 2005-6 and Tehran 2006, Tabrizian has
been influenced by New Wave Iranian Cinema. This has transformed Iranian film in
the last two decades and according to Rose
Issa, curator of this exhibition, its cinematic language "champions the
poetry in everyday life and the ordinary person by blurring the boundaries
between fiction and reality, feature film with documentary".
Tehran 2006, a large panoramic photograph of a run-down residential area in the
outskirts of the capital, is populated by a disparate group of people with all
the characters playing themselves: the crowd is a mixture of people who are
struggling and have been let down by the promises of revolution; a taxi driver,
factory worker, builder, cleaner, dress-maker and servant. Border, a group of
photographs from 2005-6, shows real people, immigrants who have left Iran and
crossed borders in search of a better life, in everyday settings. They are shown
lost in thought having brought their borders with them, remaining divided
between their present circumstances and their longing for home, or their desire
to feel at home in their new surroundings.
Tabrizian has exhibited in museums and galleries in Europe, Asia and the USA,
including most recently a solo exhibition at the Moderna Museet, Stockholm
(2006). Her work was included in Veil, Museum of Modern Art, Oxford (2003) and
Voodoo Macbeth: A tribute to the work of Orson Welles, De la Warr Pavillion.
Bexhill (2006). This exhibition has been selected by Rose Issa. It will be
accompanied by an illustrated catalogue with a text by T.J.Demos and interview
by Rose Issa (price £6.99).
... Payvand News - 05/30/08 ...
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