Curated by Silvia Cirelli, the exhibition is an important occasion to explore the artistic career of this talented and versatile interpreter, gathering a selection of works never before exhibited in Italy. The full report is quoted from the official website courtesy of Officine dell'Immagine.
Already appreciated in the international art scene, in recent years Jalal Sepehr has been able to stand out with a very personal expressive stamp, able to capture the ambivalence and complexity of Iran's social fabric, and especially exposing its manifold contradictions. Perpetually poised between the search for modernity and the need to safeguard tradition, Iran remains one of the most fascinating countries in the Middle East, and it’s articulated and complex socio-cultural structure, paradoxically, is characterized by a creative liveliness which is quite outstanding in the contemporary panorama.
After various exhibitions in several countries in Europe, Jalal Sepehr is finally coming to Italy with as far as the eye can see, an exhibition that traces the poetic synthesis of the last decade of this eclectic artist, focusing especially on the photographic series and the stylistic processes that have most significantly marked his lexical uniqueness, such as the use of the Persian carpet as a distinctive trait.
The exhibition opens with the recent series Red Zone (2013-2015), a project that stands out for its almost lacerating intensity, revealing the intimate dimension of a community - not specifically Iranian, but Middle Eastern in general - forced to live in a constant state of alarm, in a red zone precisely, where threat and danger are the only faithful companions. On a long walkway made of beautiful Persian carpets, a huge boulder fallen from the sky, or a fierce sandstorm, or a plane that has just taken flight, appear regularly to obstruct the passage, making any escape route difficult. The carpet returns as a central element also in the surreal setting of Water and Persian Rugs, of 2004, becoming instead an imaginary bridge between past and present, a magnetic slippery surface that you are forced to cross if you really want to be a protagonist of your own time, without having too much fear of the unexpected. Next is the evocative series Knot of 2011 and the work Girl and the Mirror of 2010, both realized between the walls and the characteristic clay domes of the beautiful ancient city of Yazd, in central Iran. Finally, the exhibition closes with Sepehr's latest photographic project, Color as Gray (2014-2016), which with elegant fragility questions the dramatic reality of the war, now an everyday element in many Middle Eastern countries. A sad testament to how the wounds of these conflicts never really heal.
Jalal Sepehr was born in Tehran (Iran) in 1968, where he currently lives and works. He took up photography in 1995, learning as an autodidact. After three years of experience in Japan, Sepehr returned to Iran, where he founded the site Fanoos Photo with the photographer Dariush Kiani. He has taken part in numerous international exhibitions and festivals, such as Pulso Iraniano at the Oi Futuro in Rio de Janeiro (2011); The PX3 Festival (France), the Peking Art Photography Festival (China), the Australian Photography Festival in Sydney (2014) or the International Photo Festival in Belgium (2009).
SH/PR