WATER MILL, NY .- The Parrish Art Museum introduces Shirin Neshat: Born of Fire, the internationally renowned Iranian-born artists first solo museum exhibition in the New York area in 20 years and first ever on the East End of Long Island. Opening April 20, 2025, the exhibition provides a non-linear survey of Neshats artistic development through four significant bodies of work: Women of Allah (199397), The Book of Kings (2012), Land of Dreams (2019), and The Fury (202223). Presented together, these bodies of work trace the evolution of Neshats practice, exploring themes of female empowerment, political resistance, and displacement through photography, video, and film, and highlight her distinctive use of poetic imagery, calligraphy, and deep personal storytelling. The presentation also features a small gallery dedicated to Neshats private collection of work by fellow artists from the Middle East and friends, such as Marina Abramović and Robert Longo.
Mónica Ramírez-Montagut, Executive Director of the Parrish Art Museum said, "We are proud to present this groundbreaking and comprehensive exhibition. The content is both timely and deeply relevant. For the Parrish, exhibitions like this are vitalthey ensure the Museums success by engaging both local and national audiences and truly move the needle toward progress. Shirin Neshats work challenges perspectives and sparks conversations, making this exhibition a milestone for the Museum and our community."
Shirin Neshat said the following about her exhibition at the Parrish Art Museum: Shirin Neshat: Born of Fire is an exhibition that brings together my earliest to my latest work. The Women of Allah (1993-1997) and The Book of Kings (2012) photographic series capture the most significant historical and political upheavals in Iran in modern times, the 1979 Islamic revolution and the 2009 Green movement. With Land of Dreams (2019) for the first time, I turn my lens toward the West and offer my point of view as an Iranian immigrant about America, a nation that once welcomed displaced immigrants, and how its core identity is now being compromised. Finally, The Fury (2023) touches on the systematic violence and sexual exploitation of women imprisoned as political detainees by men in uniforms.
I am beyond thrilled to present this survey of Shirin Neshats workit is the culmination not only of her three-decades-long artistic career but our friendship that has lasted just as long, said Corinne Erni, Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Chief Curator, Art and Education, Parrish Art Museum. Neshats starkly beautiful, hypnotizing, and rhythmically choreographed visual stories are profoundly cathartic; they transport us to an almost religious experience that reassures us of our humanityart can do that, and we need it in these turbulent times.
Shirin Neshat: Born of Fire is organized by Corinne Erni, Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Chief Curator, Art and Education, with Scout Hutchinson, Associate Curator of Exhibitions.
Exhibition Highlights
Shirin Neshat, Speechless, from Women of Allah series, 1996. RC print and ink, 46 3/4 × 33 7/8 in. (118.7 × 86 cm). © Shirin Neshat, Courtesy of the artist and Gladstone
Women of Allah (199397)
I made this body of work
following my first trip to Iran since the 1979 Iranian Revolution. With this series, I began an uncompromising journey of experimentation and discovery, using art as the means to resolve personal dilemmas
Four symbolic elements recur in this work: the veil, the gun, the text, and the gaze. Despite the Western representation of the veil as a symbol of Muslim womens oppression, the subjects of these images look strong and imposing. In fact, the use of the black veil as a uniform has transformed the feminine body into that of a warrior, determined and even heroic
Although the Persian words written on the works surfaces may seem like a decorative motif, they contribute significant meaning. The texts are amalgams of poems and prose works mostly by contemporary women writers in Iran. These writings express sometimes diametrically opposed political and ideological views, from the slogans of martyrdom and self-sacrifice to poetic, sensual, and even sexual mediations. Shirin Neshat
Shirin Neshat, Bahram (Villains), from The Book of Kings series, 2012. Ink on LE silver gelatin print, 99 x 49 1/2 inches (251.5 x 125.7 cm). © Shirin Neshat, Courtesy of the artist, Gladstone & Noirmontartproduction, Paris
The Book of Kings (2012)
Inspired by eleventh-century poet Ferdowsis Shahnameh, the pre-Islamic Persian epic, The Book of Kings is a large-scale photographic installation exploring the concept of patriotism. In this series of staged photographs, Neshat makes visual and allegorical parallels between ancient and contemporary history and the notion of heroism in her native country Iran. The work is divided into three societal groups:
The Masses: Individual framed portraits of ordinary people with fine veils of script across their faces, revealing emotions of anxiety, resignation, defiance, and fear.
The Patriots: Figures with hands over their hearts, a universal patriotic gesture, signifying ones willingness to make any sacrifice for political change. Here, faces are covered with bolder calligraphy written in columns formatted like the verses found on the pages of traditional manuscripts of the Shahnameh. The patriots gazes suggest a sense of conviction, pride, defiance, and bravery.
The Villains: Life-sized portraits representative of political or religious figures, their torsos feature violent battle-scene imagery found in illustrations from the Shahnameh.
Digital rendering of Shirin Neshats Land of Dreams installation at Parrish Art Museum © Shirin Neshat, Courtesy of the artist
Land of Dreams (2019)
Unable to return to Iran, Neshat began turning her eye to American culture with Land of Dreams. Bridging photographic, cinematic, and video installation practices, Neshat chose the deserts of New Mexico for its similarities to Iranian landscapes as the setting for this project.
The immersive installation at the Parrish includes:
A photographic installation featuring 111 portraits of Americans in New Mexico. In 2019, Neshat traveled across the state, photographing subjects and recording their dreams. Each portrait is inscribed with Farsi text, including names, birth details, and interpretations of their dreams.
An accompanying video follows Simin, an Iranian spy disguised as an art student, who documents Americans dreams. She returns to The Colony, a secretive Iranian society hidden in the mountains, where members analyze American dreams.
Shirin Neshat, still from The Fury, 2022. Two-channel video installation, HD video monochrome, 16:15 min. © Shirin Neshat, Courtesy of the artist and Gladstone
The Fury (202223)
Shot in Brooklyn in 2022, this work features a two-channel video installation and a series of nearly life-size black-and-white photographs, focusing on the female body as both a site of violence and strength. The work delves into the trauma endured by Iranian women political prisoners, tracing the psychological aftermath of captivity. The accompanying photographs, inscribed with poetry by Iranian poet Forough Farrokhzad, convey both dignity and pain.
Shirin Neshats Personal Collection
A dedicated gallery will showcase Neshats private collection, including works by friends such as Marina Abramović and Robert Longo, as well as artists from the Middle East. This installation highlights Neshats artistic influences and her commitment to supporting fellow creators, especially from cultures where artistic expression is stifled by censorship.
About this collection, Neshat said, Over the years, Ive slowly grown a collection of artwork by artists from different generations, cultures and stages in their careers whom Ive admired. Among them are works by friends who have either generously gifted me their art or have captured my portrait as photographs or paintings. Several of the artists are Iranian women, living both in Iran and abroad, whose work speaks to me, because it captures the plight and symbolic struggle of Iranian women.
Shirin Neshat
Shirin Neshat (b. 1957, Qazvin, Iran), an Iranian-born artist and filmmaker living in New York, has spent her career examining what it means to exist between two cultures, focusing on human resilience in the face of upheaval and oppression. Neshat moved to California for her studies in the 1970s. When the Islamic Revolution erupted in Iran in 1979, she was unable to return to her home and family for many years. A brief visit in the 1990s, where she witnessed the impact of rigid Islamic law on Iranian women, marked the beginning of Neshats engagement with themes of female empowerment, political resistance, and displacement. Drawing on the emotional impact of poetry and music, her highly stylized photographs and narrative time-based works explore the turbulent social conditions of life in Iran and, more recently, America.
An internationally acclaimed artist, Neshat has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions, including at the Art Institute of Chicago; the Detroit Institute of Arts; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; Museo Correr, Venice, Italy; the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia; Pinakothek Der Moderne, Munich, Germany; Serpentine Gallery, London; SITE Santa Fe, New Mexico; the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Her retrospective, Shirin Neshat: I Will Greet the Sun Again, was shown at The Broad in Los Angeles (20192020).
Neshat has directed three feature-length films: Women Without Men (2009), which received the Silver Lion Award for Best Director at the 66th Venice International Film Festival; Looking for Oum Kulthum (2017); and most recently, Land of Dreams (2021), which premiered at the Venice Film Festival. Neshat directed Giuseppe Verdi's opera Aida at the 2017 and 2022 Salzburg Festival, which she will also direct at the Paris Opera in 2025. Awards include the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize (2006); Artist of the Decade by Huffington Post (2010); Crystal Award, World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland (2014); Rockefeller Fellow, United States Artists, New York (2016); and the Praemium Imperiale award (2017).