Nasratollah Mosleimian (Iranian, b. 1951)
Nasratollah Mosleimian (Iranian, b. 1951)

Portrait

Details
Nasratollah Mosleimian (Iranian, b. 1951)
Portrait
signed and dated in Farsi (lower right); signed and dated 'NOSRATOLLAH MOSLEMIAN -2003' (on the reverse )
acrylic on canvas
59 x 59in. (150 x 150cm.)
Painted in 2003

Lot Essay

Nasratollah Moslemian's paintings have their basis in Persian classical miniatures. His bright colours, curving lines, and rejection of scale and Western system of proportions all recall the historical model. Moslemian has transformed these elements to produce a style which is both highly abstracted and original, a contemporary take on the Persian miniature tradition.

A principle which dominates his compositions is the concept of 'sectional space'. This is seen widely in Persian miniatures, and is roughly equivalent to their ideal space. Moslemian's pictorial space, neither illusionist nor completely two-dimensional, comprises combined, detached, or overlapping subdivisions. An independent section may be either figures shown beyond the horizon line, or a coloured strip with particular motif, or a scrap of a printed illustration. The sections are often visually distinguishable, but bear a kind of conceptual interconnection. This spacing method brings about something of the feel of suspension within time and place.

Moslemian often makes reference mythological symbols, and poetic metaphors taken from the broad repertoire of Persian culture. Familiar symbols such as the crescent, the pond, the elongated cypress, birds, the bull horn, and the watermelon slice often carry more than one meaning in his paintings. His crescent is a poetic metaphor, and particularly, a tool as cutting as a sword blade; and the arched line becomes both the horizon and passage of time.

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