For the first time in decades, Tehran has seen the unveiling of some of the most coveted pieces of contemporary western art in the world.
Hardline cleric and Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi warns against western influence. Artists who are “deviant” have been called out by the authorities for “attacking Iran’s revolutionary culture.” And as Iran quickly advances its nuclear programme and diplomatic efforts stagnate, the Islamic Republic has stepped up its conflict with the US and Europe.
Contradictions, however, abound in Tehran, where tens of thousands of well-off men and women viewed American and European minimalist and conceptual masterpieces from the 19th and 20th centuries that were on show this summer at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art for the first time.
On a recent August afternoon, critics of art and students viewed Marcel Duchamp’s transparent 1915 mural The Large Glass, which has long been thought of as an investigation of erotic frustration.
A rare 4-meter (13-foot) nameless sculpture by American minimalist innovator Donald Judd and Open Cube, one of his most well-known serial works, were also on show, along with other significant works. The horizontal arrangement of lacquered brass and aluminium plates that makes up the Judd sculpture is thought to be worth millions of dollars.
Particular interest has been drawn to the current minimalism exhibition, which features 34 artists from the West. Since the exhibit’s debut, more than 17,000 people have seen the pieces, according to the museum, almost twice as many as at earlier exhibitions. Young Iranians are rapidly discovering the global art scene on social media despite their nation’s growing isolation from the rest of the world and worries that the administration elected a year ago may further restrict their already restricted social and cultural freedoms. A buzz surrounds recent galleries. Schools of architecture and the arts are thriving.