|
ASIA SOCIETY PRESENTS MAJOR EXHIBITION
CELEBRATING
PERSIAN CULTURE
HUNT FOR PARADISE: COURT ARTS OF IRAN,
1501-1576
OCTOBER 16, 2003 THROUGH JANUARY 18,
2004
Media Preview: October 14, 2003, 12:00
p.m.
This fall, the Asia Society presents a major exhibition of
spectacular works of art from the influential Golden Age of
Persian art in Iran. The first comprehensive international
exhibition of the exquisite arts produced in sixteenth-century
Safavid Iran, Hunt
for Paradise: Court Arts of Iran, 1501-1576, brings
together rarely seen objects from more than 30 public and
private collections from around the world.

Standard of pierced steel inlaid with gold
16th-17th century
The Royal Armoury, Stockholm |
Focusing on one of the greatest periods of Persian culture,
Hunt for Paradise presents some of the finest examples
of art produced in the early reign of the Safavid dynasty (1501-1786).
The exhibition comprises more than 75 objects—including
miniature paintings and arts of the book, ceramics, carpets,
textiles and metalwork—and will be on view at Asia Society
and Museum from October 16, 2003 through January 18, 2004.
According to Vishakha N. Desai, Senior Vice President of
the Asia Society and Director of the Museum and Cultural Programs,
“The Safavid court fostered an artistic flowering of
extraordinary brilliance and refinement leading to the creation
of some of the most important and influential works of art
in Iran. While the miniatures from this period are well-known,
scant attention has been paid to the consistent aesthetic
language employed across different artistic media. At a time
when the world’s eyes are focused on geopolitical issues
in the region, it is important to highlight the incredible
artistic heritage of Iran through exhibitions and related
public programs.”
Hunt for Paradise is co-organized by Asia Society
and Museo Poldi Pezzoli in Milan. The exhibition is curated
by Dr. Sheila Canby, Curator of the Department of Oriental
Antiquities, The British Museum. A curatorial advisory committee
includes other leading specialists in the field: textile expert
Jon Thompson; noted scholar Ralph Pinder-Wilson; and William
Robinson, Islamic historian and metalwork specialist. The
exhibition is accompanied by a richly illustrated catalogue
presenting current research and analysis by leading scholars
in the field of Persian and Islamic art.
The Asia Society and Museum is the exhibition’s only
U.S. venue. It will be presented concurrently at the Museo
Poldi Pezzoli and the Palazzo Reale in Milan, from March 4
through June 27, 2004.
The Exhibition
Organized historically, the exhibition explores the development
of the Safavid artistic style and the context in which it
emerged, with a focus on the reigns of Shah Isma’il
I (1501-24) and his son, Shah Tahmasp (1524-1576).

Khusrau on his throne
From Khamseh of Nizami, 1524
The Metropolitan Museum of Art |
The Formation. The first section of this exhibition
focuses on early Safavid court art under Shah Isma’il
I, who united Iran for the first time since the Arab invasion
of the seventh century. An emerging national and Shi’ite
identity was reflected in the development of a distinctive
artistic style that emerged from the embers of the Timurid
style. Works represented in this part of the exhibition include
some of the finest creations by early Safavid court artists
and craftsmen, including a complete manuscript, silk textiles,
knotted pile carpets and functional metal objects.
The Golden Age: Shah Tahmasp at Tabriz (1524-55).
Safavid court art flourished as a new artistic synthesis,
permeating nearly every aspect of Iranian culture under the
patronage of Shah Tahmasp. The first three decades of his
rule were characterized by conflict and insurrection necessitating
constant movement. During this time, his peripatetic court
developed and transmitted a distinctive Safavid style as a
means of underscoring the ubiquity and legitimacy of their
rule in Iran. Painting styles of the Turkmen court of Tabriz
and the Timurid court of Herat were synthesized into a new
Safavid idiom characterized by greater figural depiction and
floral and filigree ornament. This section of the exhibition
includes some of the most important objects from this high
point of Safavid art, including delicate drawings on paper,
gold inlaid daggers and swords, and breathtaking book illuminations.
New Patrons and Shah Tahmasp at Qazvin (1555-76).
The second half of Shah Tahmasp’s long reign witnessed
the maturity of this brilliant artistic flowering, as well
as its spread to neighboring Muslim empires. As Shah Tahmasp
himself gradually became more interested in spiritual matters
and moved away from art, the Safavid style was patronized
by other members of the royal family and the court. It was
also disseminated to commercial artists through the artistic
centers of the empire, as the Safavid capital was moved from
Tabriz to Qazvin, located on the east-west trade route leading
from India in the east and Anatolia in the west. During this
time of relative peace, prosperity and increased trade, Safavid
arts continued to thrive, and styles and techniques were transmitted
with the flow of goods to Ottoman Turkey and Mughal India.
The objects in the Hunt for Paradise exhibition
have been chosen for their exceptional quality and historical
importance, and have been loaned from more than 30 public
and private collections in Europe, North America and Asia.
Major loans include: “The Hunting Carpet,” from
the Museo Poldi Pezzoli in Milan, one of only three surviving
dated sixteenth-century Persian carpets; the sumptuous illuminated
dedication page and several miniature paintings from the renowned
national epic poem Shahnameh (Book of Kings), finished
under Shah Tahmasp; and folio-sized paintings from the Falnameh
(Book of Divination), commissioned by Shah Tahmasp, unusual
for its oversize pages and atypical text and illustrations.
Lavishly crafted precious metal objects, such as a sword and
standard of steel inlaid with gold, demonstrate the extraordinary
quality of steel craftsmanship in the sixteenth century. In
addition, the exhibition includes the British Library’s
collection of world-famous miniatures from Shah Tahmasp’s
Khamseh of Nizami, including the Majnun Brought
in Chains to Layla’s Tent and one of the best-known
Iranian paintings, the Ascent of the Prophet.
The exhibition draws its title from notions of paradise and
its image as a garden, the journey of the faithful to a heavenly
world and the effort by the Safavid court to evoke a secular
parallel equivalent through the depiction of the garden. In
Islamic art, the depiction of hunting—which played a
major role in Safavid court life and was a favorite pastime
of the monarchy—is a metaphor for the lover’s
pursuit of the beloved and the soul’s search for the
Divine. In Persian poetry, the hunt appears in many guises,
both literal and mystical, involving both the killing of animals
with weapons and the metaphor of the snare or trap. The term
“hunting carpet” originally referred to Persian
carpets from the 15th-17th century depicting hunting scenes
or animals in combat all within an intricately designed floral
background.
The arts of the book—calligraphy, illustration and
binding—were of paramount importance in Safavid life
and culture. The appreciation for manuscript production during
the reigns of Shah Isma’il and Shah Tahmasp led to new
styles and innovations in decoration and binding. The Safavid
rulers so valued the practice and connoisseurship of calligraphy
that they conferred on their scribes the status of court officials.
Scribes helped to prepare official documents and to produce
beautifully written copies of literary texts for dynastic
members. Similarly, manuscript painting reached a zenith under
Shah Tahmasp as court artists explored new methods of and
inspirational sources for their illustrations. Miniature painters
created designs used in textiles, carpets, wall paintings
and other art forms. Motifs reflected royal imagery such as
hunting, banquets in the open air, and mounted figures in
military conquest.
Though royal manuscripts of legend, history and poetry have
illustrations depicting the range of human activity, royal
patrons particularly liked to see themselves clothed in the
epic or romantic events of past times. Illustrations of love
and of lovers often show them in a garden with the flowering
trees, silken carpets and cushions, fruits and running water
described in the Koran, combined with sequences of music-making
or the hunt. Manuscript paintings can be interpreted on three
levels: they illustrate a specific narrative, they reflect
the traditions of courtly love and they evoke the heavenly
garden, with its chaste and beautiful inhabitants.
A unique feature of the exhibition will be a touch-screen
manuscript program developed in Sweden, which will allow visitors
to ‘virtually’ examine all of the pages of Jalal
o Jamal, one of the important complete manuscripts in
the exhibition. Jalal o Jamal (Majesty and Beauty)
is an allegorical love poem with Sufi undertones composed
in Herat by the poet known as Amin, during the reign of the
Timurid Shahrukh (1405-1447). The present handwritten manuscript
is written in a fine nasta’liq (a flowing script used
for copying verse that was developed during the fourteenth
century) by the hand of Sultan ‘Ali Qa’ini in
1502, and lavishly illustrated with 34 miniatures. While the
manuscript will be displayed open to one page, the touch-screen
desk will allow viewers ‘virtually’ to turn, view
and enlarge additional pages and miniatures, as well as read
commentary on each of the miniatures.
Related Exhibition — TOOBA: Shirin Neshat
As a unique component of the programming related
to Hunt for Paradise, the Asia Society will present
the U.S. premiere of Tooba (2002), a double-screen
video installation by the renowned artist Shirin Neshat. A
leading contemporary artist whose videos and photographs draw
upon her Iranian heritage for inspiration, Neshat uses her
artwork to explore her very sensitive and complex relationship
to her country of origin. Tooba, one of her most
recent works, is both inspired by Shahrnoush Parsipour’s
contemporary novel, Women Without Men and drawn from
the story of the Tooba tree in the Koran. She uses the garden
(a recurring motif in Persian art) as a symbol for both a
spiritual longing for paradise and a quest for political power.
The 12-minute video is projected on two screens on opposing
walls.
According to Melissa Chiu, curator of the exhibition and
the Asia Society’s Curator of Contemporary Asian and
Asian American Art, “Neshat draws on her cultural heritage
to create works that communicate universal ideas about loss,
meaning and memory. In Tooba, she engages the viewer
in a visual conversation that explores issues such as the
immigrant experience, tradition versus modernity, the position
of women and the complexities of Islam. The exhibition provides
an intriguing counterpoint to the historical works of art
in Hunt for Paradise.”
Neshat was born in 1957 in Qazvin, Iran, where the Golden
Age of Islamic art flowered. She left Iran in 1974 to study
art at the University of California, Berkeley, and did not
return to Iran until 1990. She has held solo exhibitions in
England at Tate Gallery, London (1998), Serpentine Gallery,
London (2000) and in the United States at Walker Art Center
(2002) and the Whitney Museum of American Art, Philip Morris
(1998). Tooba was commissioned by Documenta 11 in
Kassel, Germany and was the first of Neshat’s pieces
to be shown in her native country, at an exhibition in Tehran’s
Museum of Contemporary Art. TOOBA: Shirin Neshat
is on display at Asia Society and Museum from October 12,
2003 through February 15, 2004.
Related Programs
The Asia Society will present a number of performances and
public programs to coincide with Hunt for Paradise
and TOOBA: Shirin Neshat, providing audiences with
an additional contextual framework for enjoying the exhibitions.
As part of its popular “Tea House Series,” in
which audiences sit in an intimate bazm-like setting
with carpets on the floor, the Asia Society will present two
concerts of Hossein Omoumi, a master singer and one of the
best ney (Persian flute) players from Iran. Through
a program of music, song and recitation, the concerts will
bring to life the works of Persian mystical poets Sa’di,
Hafez and Rumi. Additionally, a series of lunchtime lectures
will examine Iran’s unique artistic heritage throughout
the ages. A panel discussion will explore ethnic and religious
diversity in Iran, past and present. Another panel will examine
contemporary Persian culture and creativity. Film programs
will include Iranian and Iranian American features and documentaries,
ranging from dramas to a rare look into mystic rituals and
religious ceremonies. Programming on the current politics
and social issues that are shaping contemporary Iran are also
planned.
Major institutional support for exhibitions and related programs
is provided by The Starr Foundation, Doris Duke Foundation
for Islamic Art, and The Folger Fund. The exhibitions are
supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the
Arts and Humanities, and supported in part by a grant from
the National Endowment for the Arts, as well as generous contributions
from individuals.
About the Asia Society
The Asia Society is America’s leading institution dedicated
to fostering understanding of Asia and communication between
Americans and the peoples of Asia and the Pacific. A nonprofit,
nonpartisan educational institution, the Asia Society presents
a wide range of programs including major art exhibitions,
performances, media programs, international conferences and
lectures, and initiatives to improve elementary and secondary
education about Asia. The Asia Society is headquartered in
New York City, with regional centers in Washington, D.C.,
Houston, Los Angeles, Hong Kong and Melbourne, Australia,
and representative offices in San Francisco, Manila and Shanghai.
Asia Society and Museum
725 Park Avenue (at 70th Street), New York City.
(212) 517-ASIA, www.asiasociety.org
Hours: Tuesday - Sunday, 11:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.; Fridays extended
evening hours until 9:00 P.M.; Closed on Mondays and major
holidays.
Admission: $7; $5 for seniors and students with ID; Free for
members and persons under 16; Free to all on Friday evenings,
6:00 - 9:00 P.M.
# # # |