in Events , Frieze | 26 JAN 22

'Soft Edge of the Blade', a new exhibition presented by Dastan Gallery from Tehran

A free exhibition at No.9 Cork Street, exploring the many aspects of violence in Iran and the Middle East

in Events , Frieze | 26 JAN 22

Tehran-based Dastan Gallery presents 'Soft Edge of the Blade', the first in a new series of exhibitions at No.9 Cork Street in London, from 3 February - 1 March 2022.

This free exhibition explores the ways contemporary Iranian artists handle and respond in their work to the many aspects of violence in the Middle East. 

From the more obvious forms of violence – be it war, political oppression or state violence – to the more subtle and insidious forms of "soft" violence afflicting Iranians today, including migration and diaspora, identity and gender, patriarchy and family, the weight of history on individuals or the use of the language of oppression in the digital age – 'Soft Edge of the Blade' offers visitors the opportunity to discover or delve deeper into Iran’s leading contemporary art scene.

Nicky Nodjoumi, Give Yourself a Chance, 2020
Nicky Nodjoumi, Give Yourself a Chance, 2020

Exhibition text: Soft Edge of the Blade

The same faculties (senses) that bring us pleasure cause us pain and the same faculty (mind) that plans for our happiness formulates our suffering. Soft Edge of the Blade is an acknowledgement of this seemingly mutually exclusive duality. The soft edge of the blade is no less painful when it cuts but there is a difference and we want to explore this difference by looking at works of artists who may not even posit "violence" as their subject matter.

Soft violence is not the representation of the violence hence it rarely gives in to the politics of representation. It is the presentation of the violence in the metonymy and poetics of the make and the image. It is an invitation to experience the nuances of a concept as it has been experienced by a human subject. Through this arrangement works of an artist as a human subject is seen worthy of exploration and therefore the stereotypical reading of the message is rendered irrelevant.

How does violence manifest softly? Do we even know that it has taken place? Do we need someone to point it out? Aren't we creating it by talking about it? We know that any conceptual treatment of violence runs the risk of dramatizing it. That's why works of art may serve us well here, because they come from another realm of inquiry, one that is beyond conceptualization.

Farah Ossouli, Put Your Gun Down, 2010
Farah Ossouli, Put Your Gun Down, 2010

So, the audience of Soft Edge of Violence is invited to not see violence, to even put it aside, when looking at these works. This is a playful invitation. Let us set aside our conceptual, habitual understanding of violence in all its manifestations and simply look. Perhaps in this way we will gain a deeper understanding as to the nature of suffering we see all around us.

Let us NOT see violence where local hero/heroines are abandoned, bloody eyed, by their society • the pain of otherness in a world whose very existence is predicated on othering • subjected to rituals of exorcism • glorification of suicide for a cause • agglomeration of nostalgia in a box • thick layering of magmatic emotions • casting for the comradery of war • manhandling love • of love on fire • of erasing the undesirable from our lives • of many angels dancing on a pin • of a velvety heritage passed down into the future • of childhood interrupted • of tears turned into stone • of femininity kept behind doors and drapes • of lines that grow so enormous as to dominate our field of vision • of allegorical tales of salvation • of smashed/collapsed/disintegrated faces with bulging eyes • of faceless personaggio in blank expression • of the mischievous incubus of lore • of homework for long winter nights • of great heroes long lost to sleep • of primitive masks glossed in sophistication.

Homa Delvaray, "Khâsh", 2021
Homa Delvaray, Khâsh, 2021

The full list of participating artists is: Ali Akbar Sadeghi, Amin Montazeri, Andisheh Avini, Ardeshir Mohassess, Bahman Mohassess, Bita Fayyazi, Farah OssouliFarrokh Mahdavi, Fereydoun Ave, Ghasem Hajizadeh, Ghasemi Brothers, Hoda Kashiha, Homa Delvaray, Mamali Shafahi, Mehdi Ghadyanloo, Mohsen Vaziri Moghadam, Nasser Bakhshi, Nicky Nodjoumi, Peybak, Reza Aramesh, Reza Derakhshani, Sam Samiee and Shayan Sajadian.

Farrokh Mahdavi, Untitled, 2021
Farrokh Mahdavi, Untitled, 2021

 

Find out more about No.9 Cork Street

SHARE THIS