A New “Vision”: Early Works of Ahmad Aali and the Emergence of Fine Art Photography in Iran (1960s–1970s) (original) (raw)

This article explores the emergence of fine art photography in Iran during the 1960s and 1970s, bringing to the fore the significance of Ahmad Aali and his early photographic works for this transformation. It sheds light on the confluence of the main trajectories that paved the way for the formation of fine art photography in Iran, firstly by exploring historical practices of photography, secondly by addressing the influences of transforming political and social agendas after World War II on photographic developments, and finally by underlining the involvement of photography in the artistic sphere of that time. Central to the latter is Aali's contribution to theoretical discourses about photography as an artistic medium and the major role he played in the first photographic exhibitions in art spaces. In that perspective, this article argues for the pivotal role of Ahmad Aali in bridging the gap between photography and art for the first time in Iran's long history of photography. It analyses Aali's photographic works exhibited during the 1960s and 1970s to comprehend the circumstances of the emergence of fine art photography in Iran, and does so by discussing the modernist aesthetics in photography that emerged at the time. Going beyond Aali's regional importance, it examines his conceptual approaches to overcoming the 'static realism' and the limitations of the medium. Aali's novel photographic concepts of space and time that emerged therefrom should be accorded their full autonomy and uniqueness in the (rewriting g of a narrative of art history on their very premises. This article thereby seeks to support a critique of the narrow epistemo-logical boundaries of the discipline of art history and its resulting marginalization of locally developed art forms and concepts.

From Commitment to Expressionism: a survey on the changing concept of photography in Iran

Visual Studies, 2020

This paper examines the evolution of the concept of photography in Iran during the two decades following the 1979 Islamic revolution and its relationship to a changing political discourse during that period. Since the state became a dominant player in culture and the arts during the post-Islamic revolutionary era, this paper puts the evolution of the concept of photography into a socio-political context. Using Discursive Institutionalism as a theoretical framework, we examine Iranian photographers’ ideas on photography as well as the discourses that affected photography organisations, revealing the forces driving changes in how photographic work was conceived. The first decade following 1979 the Islamic revolution was marked by eight years of war, and photography was purposed to produce factual documents, leaving no room for picture-making, manipulation or self-expression. Meanwhile due to the revolutionary and leftist agenda set forth by the Mir-Hussein Mousavi administration (1981–1989), photography was formulated as a commitment to depict social deprivation and the difficulties in achieving social reforms. However, with the liberalising ideas introduced during Hashemi Rafsanjani’s administration (1989–1997), the concept of photography began to change. Photographic work became less an expression of political commitment to being seen as a form of self-expression that valued formalism and image-making. In other words, the changing political discourses during this period mark a shift from ‘taking’ to ‘making’ photographs. The intellectual opening In Iranian society that began in the early 1990s both paved the way for a more theoretical approach to photography as well as growing diversity in the organisation of photographic work. In particular, the more liberal attitude of the Rafsanjani administration resulted in a significant increase in the number of journals, newspapers and publications that provided a market for more imaginative photography, and a fluorescence of picture ‘making.’

Western Literature on the History of Qajar Era Photography

2007

This bibliographic essay runs through the history of western studies of the history of photography connected with the events in Iran during the Qajar era, and records the bibliographic notes from the literature on the subject between 1960 and 2006. The introduction sketches out an overview high-lighting the connections between the research done so far, as well as the construction of the specific historiographical sources and the defi nition of the varied historiographical interpretations. What initially drew our interest was the early contribution of an Italian scholar in 1972 and the presence of Italian photographers in Persia operating during the Qajar era. Later the development of western studies and the interaction with Iranian studies led to what is now a clear project to build a historiography of Iranian photography, a working model where both historiography and its object, photography, are evident.

Loading...

Loading Preview

Sorry, preview is currently unavailable. You can download the paper by clicking the button above.