NEW YORK, NY.- This September,
Taymour Grahne Gallery opens its doors with an inaugural exhibition by acclaimed Iranian painter Nicky Nodjoumi. Featuring large-scale oil paintings in the main gallery and works on paper in the lower gallery, Chasing the Butterfly and Other Recent Paintings explores Nodjoumis surreal hybridization of historic and contemporary imagery intercut with sharp political commentary.
Born 1942, in Kermanshah, Iran and based in New York since 1981, Nodjoumi uses his practice to explore the intersection of his personal history with the politics of alienation and dislocation. Combining historic references, social realist critique and surrealist abstraction, his compositions feature multi-layered human figures engaged with bizarrely counter-poised animals, theatrically staged against indeterminate backdrops and barren landscapes.
Not unlike the work of the German Social Realist Neo Rauch, Nodjoumis paintings suggest the intention of a narrative reading, but are instead cryptic and open-ended. In Inspectors Scrutiny, 2012, warriors from traditional Persian miniatures join with anonymous suited men in the struggle to tether and subjugate a supine horse, creating a scene that is both politically charged and ambiguously unresolved. Nodjoumis figures are continually spliced and rejoined on fractured registers with mismatched proportions, a spatial discrepancy that heightens the works disjointed layering of history and identity.
This uneasy perspective is balanced by the artists humorous, yet bitter satire. In Time to Pray, 2012, a family of apes grouped in a pose redolent of ritual worship are in fact engaged in coital activity, overseen by a supplicating mullah, who seems to vindicate the absurdity of adherence to religious stricture.
In Nodjoumis works on paper, politicians and businessmen cut from the days paper are extricated from their public personae and recontextualized in undefined circumstances, often framed within the confines of a rigidly structured grid, echoing unnamed systems of authoritarian order. Complicating the works play between fantasy and reality by providing a hint of material textuality, the artists sketches and clippings are also on display.
As artist, writer and curator Phong Bui considers in the exhibitions accompanying catalog essay, Nodjoumis newest paintings evidence a negotiation between political convictionsones that belong squarely neither to his native home nor his adopted oneand the intricate yet obdurate language of painting he has created for himself out of necessity.
Born in Kermanshah, Iran in 1942, Nicky Nodjoumi experienced the Islamic Revolution of 1979 from the perspective of a young artist, astutely aware of the political and social upheavals of this tumultuous period in Irans history. After earning a Bachelors degree in art from Tehran University of Fine Arts, Nodjoumi moved to the United States in the late 1960s and received his Masters degree in Fine Arts from The City College of New York in 1974. He later returned to Tehran as a member of the faculty at his alma mater, joining his politically galvanized students in their criticism of the Shahs regime and designing political posters inspired by the revolutionary spirit sweeping the country, only to be exiled once more in the aftermath of the revolution.
Nodjoumi has exhibited internationally and is in several prominent collections worldwide, including the British Museum in London, the Salsali Private Museum in Dubai, and the National Museum of Cuba. His work will be featured in the exhibition Iran Modern, opening at the Asia Society in New York in September 2013, in conjunction with his solo exhibition at Taymour Grahne Gallery. The artist lives and works in Brooklyn.